I. Taxation
I. Taxation
I. Taxation
SYLLABUS
LTA131 / TAXATION 1
PART A
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
I. TAXATION
A. Definition
Taxation is a mode of raising revenue for public purposes
On March 31, 1952, petitioner filed his income tax return for 1951 with the treasurer of Bacolod
City wherein he claimed, among other things, the amount of P12,837.65 as a deductible item
from his gross income pursuant to General Circular No. V-123 issued by the Collector of Internal
Revenue. On the basis of said return, an assessment notice demanding the payment of P9,419
was sent to petitioner, who paid the tax in monthly installments, the last payment having been
made on January 2, 1953.
Meanwhile, on August 30, 1952, the Secretary of Finance, through the Collector of Internal
Revenue, issued General Circular No. V-139 which not only revoked and declared void his general
Circular No. V-123 but laid down the rule that losses of property which occurred during the
period of World War II from fires, storms, shipwreck or other casualty, or from robbery, theft, or
embezzlement are deductible in the year of actual loss or destruction of said property. The
deduction was disallowed and the CIR demanded from him P3,546 as deficiency income tax for
said year. The petition for reconsideration filed by petitioner was denied so he filed a petition for
review with the CTA. The SC affirmed the assessment made by the CIR. Hence, this appeal.
Issue: 1. Whether Hilado can claim compensation during the war; and
2. Whether the internal revenue laws can been enforced during the war
Ruling:
1. No. Assuming that said amount represents a portion of the 75% of his war damage claim
which was not paid, the same would not be deductible as a loss in 1951 because, according to
petitioner, the last installment he received from the War Damage Commission, together with the
notice that no further payment would be made on his claim, was in 1950. In the circumstance,
said amount would at most be a proper deduction from his 1950 gross income. In the second
place, said amount cannot be considered as a "business asset" which can be deducted as a loss
in contemplation of law because its collection is not enforceable as a matter of right, but is
dependent merely upon the generosity and magnanimity of the U. S. government. As of the end
of 1945, there was absolutely no law under which petitioner could claim compensation for the
destruction of his properties during the battle for the liberation of the Philippines. And under the
Philippine Rehabilitation Act of 1946, the payments of claims by the War Damage Commission
merely depended upon its discretion to be exercised in the manner it may see lit, but the non-
payment of which cannot give rise to any enforceable right.
2. Yes. It is well known that our internal revenue laws are not political in nature and as such
were continued in force during the period of enemy occupation and in effect were actually
enforced by the occupation government. As a matter of fact, income tax returns were filed during
that period and income tax payment were effected and considered valid and legal. Such tax laws
are deemed to be the laws of the occupied territory and not of the occupying enemy.
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C. Scope and Nature of Taxation
- Sec. 28, Art. VI, 1987 Constitution
SECTION 28. (1) The rule of taxation shall be uniform and equitable. The Congress shall evolve a
progressive system of taxation.
(2) The Congress may, by law, authorize the President to fix within specified limits, and subject
to such limitations and restrictions as it may impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas,
tonnage and wharfage dues, and other duties or imposts within the framework of the national
development program of the Government.
(3) Charitable institutions, churches and parsonages or convents appurtenant thereto, mosques,
non-profit cemeteries, and all lands, buildings, and improvements, actually, directly, and
exclusively used for religious, charitable, or educational purposes shall be exempt from taxation.
(4) No law granting any tax exemption shall be passed without the concurrence of a majority of
all the Members of the Congress.
FACTS: Chamber of Real Estate and Builders' Associations, Inc. (CREBA) is an association of real
estate developers and builders in the Philippines. It impleaded former Executive Secretary Alberto
Romulo, then acting Secretary of Finance Juanita D. Amatong and then Commissioner of Internal
Revenue Guillermo Parayno, Jr. as respondents. CREBA assails the validity of the imposition of
minimum corporate income tax (MCIT) on corporations and creditable withholding tax (CWT) on
sales of real properties classified as ordinary assets. Section 27(E) of RA 8424 provides for MCIT
on domestic corporations and is implemented by RR 9- 98. Petitioner argues that the MCIT
violates the due process clause because it levies income tax even if there is no realized gain.
CREBA also seeks to nullify Sections 2.57.2(J) (as amended by RR 6-2001) and 2.58.2 of RR 2-
98, and Section 4(a)(ii) and (c)(ii) of RR 7-2003, all of which prescribe the rules and procedures
for the collection of CWT on the sale of real properties categorized as ordinary assets. CREBA
contends that these revenue regulations are contrary to law for two reasons: (1) they ignore the
different treatment by RA 8424 of ordinary assets and capital assets; and (2), respondent
Secretary of Finance has no authority to collect CWT, much less, to base the CWT on the gross
selling price or fair market value of the real properties classified as ordinary assets. CREBA also
asserts that the enumerated provisions of the subject revenue regulations violate the due process
clause because, like the MCIT, the government collects income tax even when the net income
has not yet been determined. They contravene the equal protection clause as well because the
CWT is being levied upon real estate enterprises but not on other business enterprises, more
particularly those in the manufacturing sector.
ISSUE:
1. Whether or not the imposition of the MCIT on domestic corporations is unconstitutional.
2. Whether or not the imposition of CWT on income from sales of real properties classified as
ordinary assets under RRs 2-98, 6-2001 and 7-2003, is unconstitutional.
RULING: 1. NO. The MCIT on domestic corporations is a new concept introduced by RA 8424 to
the Philippine taxation system. It was devised as a relatively simple and effective revenue-raising
instrument compared to the normal income tax which is more difficult to control and enforce. It
is a means to ensure that everyone will make some minimum contribution to the support of the
public sector. Domestic corporations owe their corporate existence and their privilege to do
business to the government. They also benefit from the efforts of the government to improve the
financial market and to ensure a favorable business climate. It is therefore fair for the
government to require them to make a reasonable contribution to the public expenses.Congress
intended to put a stop to the practice of corporations which, while having large turnovers, report
minimal or negative net income resulting in minimal or zero income taxes year in and year out,
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through under-declaration of income or over-deduction of expenses otherwise called tax shelters.
Certainly, an income tax is arbitrary and confiscatory if it taxes capital because capital is not
income. In other words, it is income, not capital, which is subject to income tax. However, the
MCIT is not a tax on capital. The MCIT is imposed on gross income which is arrived at by
deducting the capital spent by a corporation in the sale of its goods, i.e., the cost of goods and
other direct expenses from gross sales. Clearly, the capital is not being taxed. Furthermore, the
MCIT is not an additional tax imposition. It is imposed in lieu of the normal net income tax, and
only if the normal income tax is suspiciously low. The MCIT merely approximates the amount of
net income tax due from a corporation, pegging the rate at a very much reduced 2% and uses as
the base the corporation’s gross income. Besides, there is no legal objection to a broader tax
base or taxable income by eliminating all deductible items and at the same time reducing the
applicable tax rate. Statutes taxing the gross "receipts," "earnings," or "income" of particular
corporations are found in many jurisdictions. Tax thereon is generally held to be within the power
of a state to impose; or constitutional, unless it interferes with interstate commerce or violates
the requirement as to uniformity of taxation.
MCIAA objected to the same as baseless and unjustified, claiming its exemption under its charter.
Also, it cites the LGC stating that LGUs taxing power does not extend to taxes, fees or charges of
any kind on the National Government, its agencies and instrumentalities, and local government
units.
Cebu City countered, however, citing Sections 193 and 234 of the LGC which withdraw tax
exemptions of GOCCs and realty tax exemptions previously granted to ore presently enjoyed by
all persons, whether natural or juridical, including GOCCs.
MCIAA paid tax under protest. It insisted that the taxing powers of LGUs do not extend to the
levy of taxes or fees of any kind on an instrumentality of the national government. It also insisted
that while it is indeed a GOCC, it nonetheless stands on the same footing as an agency or
instrumentality of the national government by the very nature of its powers and functions.
ISSUES:
[1] Is MCIAA a taxable person?
[2] Is MCIAA exempt from realty taxation?
HELD:
[1] Yes, although it previously enjoyed exemption from realty tax under its charter (which has
already been withdrawn by the LGC), this exemption extended only to said tax, not to other
taxes. Hence, MCIAA is still a taxable person.
[2] No, MCIAA is not exempt from realty tax by the City of Cebu. First, its tax exemption under
its charter has already been withdrawn. Second, while it is true that LGUs cannot levy tax on
property of the Republic of the Philippines or the National Government (outside Metro Manila),
the beneficial use of property should not be given to a taxable person.
Here, MCIAA is already the owner of the parcels of land in question. Hence, even the exemption
under the LGC cannot apply.
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warehousing, distribution and/or transshipment of general merchandise, including alcohol and
tobacco products, and uniformly granted them tax exemptions for such importations. Congress
subsequently passed R.A. No. 9334, however, effective on January 1, 2005, Section 6 of which
provides: Sec. 6. Section 131 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, as amended, is
hereby amended to read as follows: Sec. 131. Payment of Excise Taxes on Imported Articles. –
(A) Persons Liable. – Excise taxes on imported articles shall be paid by the owner or importer to
the Customs Officers, conformably with the regulations of the Department of Finance and before
the release of such articles from the customshouse or by the person who is found in possession
of articles which are exempt from excise taxes other than those legally entitled to exemption. In
the case of tax-free articles brought or imported into the Philippines by persons, entities or
agencies exempt from tax which are subsequently sold, transferred or exchanged in the
Philippines to non-exempt persons or entities, the purchasers or recipients shall be considered
the importers thereof, and shall be liable for the duty and internal revenue tax due on such
importation. The provision of any special or general law to the contrary notwithstanding, the
importation of cigars and cigarettes, distilled spirits, fermented liquors and wines into the
Philippines, even if destined for tax and duty free shops, shall be subject to all applicable taxes,
duties, charges, including excise taxes due thereon. This shall apply to cigars and cigarettes,
distilled spirits, fermented liquors and wines brought directly into the duly chartered or legislated
freeports of the Subic Economic Freeport Zone, created under Republic Act No. 7227; x x x and
such other freeports as may hereafter be established or created by law: Provided, further, That
importations of cigars and cigarettes, distilled spirits, fermented liquors and wines made directly
by a governmentowned and operated duty-free shop, like the Duty Free Philippines (DFP), shall
be exempted from all applicable duties only: x x x Provided, finally, That the removal and transfer
of tax and duty-free goods, products, machinery, equipment and other similar articles other than
cigars and cigarettes, distilled spirits, fermented liquors and wines, from one Freeport to another
Freeport, shall not be deemed an introduction into the Philippine customs territory. x x x. On the
basis of Section 6 of R.A. No. 9334, SBMA issued on January 10, 2005 a Memorandum declaring
that effective January 1, 2005, all importations of cigars, cigarettes, distilled spirits, fermented
liquors and wines into the SBF, including those intended to be transshipped to other free ports in
the Philippines, shall be treated as ordinary importations subject to all applicable taxes, duties
and charges, including excise taxes. On February 15, 2005, private respondents wrote the offices
of respondent Collector of Customs and the SBMA Administrator requesting for a reconsideration
of the directives on the imposition of duties and taxes, particularly excise taxes, on their
shipments of cigars, cigarettes, wines and
liquors. Despite these letters, however, they were not allowed to file any warehousing entry for
their shipments. Thus, private respondent enterprises, through their representatives, brought
before the RTC of Olongapo City a special civil action for declaratory relief to have certain
provisions of R.A. No. 9334 declared as unconstitutional. In the main, private respondents
submitted that (1) R.A. No. 9334 should not be interpreted as altering, modifying or amending
the provisions of R.A. No. 7227 because repeals by implication are not favored; (2) a general law
like R.A. No. 9334 cannot amend R.A. No. 7727, which is a special law; and (3) the assailed law
violates the one bill-one subject rule embodied in Section 26(1), Article VI of the Constitution as
well as the constitutional proscription against the impairment of the obligation of contracts.
Alleging that great and irreparable loss and injury would befall them as a consequence of the
imposition of taxes on alcohol and tobacco products brought into the SBF, private respondents
prayed for the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction and/or Temporary Restraining Order
(TRO) and preliminary mandatory injunction to enjoin the directives of herein petitioners.
Petitioners duly opposed the private respondents’ prayer for the issuance of a writ of preliminary
injunction and/or TRO, arguing that (1) tax exemptions are not presumed and even when
granted, are strictly construed against the grantee; (2) an increase in business expense is not the
injury contemplated by law, it being a case of damnum absque injuria; and (3) the drawback
mechanism established in the law clearly negates the possibility of the feared injury. Petitioners
moreover pointed out that courts are enjoined from issuing a writ of injunction and/or TRO on
the grounds of an alleged nullity of a law, ordinance or administrative regulation or circular or in
a manner that would effectively dispose of the main case. Taxes, they stressed, are the lifeblood
of the government and their prompt and certain availability is an imperious need. They
maintained that greater injury would be inflicted on the public should the writ be granted. On
May 4, 2005, the court a quo granted private respondents’ application for the issuance of a writ
of preliminary injunction, after it found that the essential requisites for the issuance of a
preliminary injunction were present.
ISSUE: Whether the Writ of Preliminary Injunction was properly issued. (NO)
RULING: For a writ of preliminary injunction to issue, the plaintiff must be able to establish that
(1) there is a clear and unmistakable right to be protected, (2) the invasion of the right sought to
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be protected is material and substantial, and (3) there is an urgent and paramount necessity for
the writ to prevent serious damage. Conversely, failure to establish either the existence of a clear
and positive right which should be judicially protected through the writ of injunction, or of the
acts or attempts to commit any act which endangers or tends to endanger the existence of said
right, or of the urgent need to prevent serious damage, is a sufficient ground for denying the
preliminary injunction. It is beyond cavil that R.A. No. 7227 granted private respondents
exemption from local and national taxes, including excise taxes, on their importations of general
merchandise, for which reason they enjoyed tax-exempt status until the effectivity of R.A. No.
9334. By subsequently enacting R.A. No. 9334, however, Congress expressed its intention to
withdraw private respondents’ tax exemption privilege on their importations of cigars, cigarettes,
distilled spirits, fermented liquors and wines.
To note, the old Section 131 of the NIRC expressly provided that all taxes, duties, charges,
including excise taxes shall not apply to importations of cigars, cigarettes, fermented spirits and
wines brought directly into the duly chartered or legislated freeports of the SBF. On the other
hand, Section 131, as amended by R.A. No. 9334, now provides that such taxes, duties and
charges, including excise taxes, shall apply to importation of cigars and cigarette Without
necessarily passing upon the validity of the withdrawal of the tax exemption privileges of private
respondents, it behooves this Court to state certain basic principles and observations that should
throw light on the propriety of the issuance of the writ of preliminary injunction in this case. First.
Every presumption must be indulged in favor of the constitutionality of a statute. The burden of
proving the unconstitutionality of a law rests on the party assailing the law. In passing upon the
validity of an act of a co-equal and coordinate branch of the government, courts must ever be
mindful of the time-honored principle that a statute is presumed to be valid. Second. There is no
vested right in a tax exemption, more so when the latest expression of legislative intent renders
its continuance doubtful. Being a mere statutory privilege, a tax exemption may be modified or
withdrawn at will by the granting authority. To state otherwise is to limit the taxing power of the
State, which is unlimited, plenary, comprehensive and supreme. The power to impose taxes is
one so unlimited in force and so searching in extent, it is subject only to restrictions which rest
on the discretion of the authority exercising it. Third. As a general rule, tax exemptions are
construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing authority. The
burden of proof rests upon the party claiming exemption to prove that it is in fact covered by the
exemption so claimed. In case of doubt, nonexemption is favored. Fourth. A tax exemption
cannot be grounded upon the continued existence of a statute which precludes its change or
repeal. Flowing from the basic precept of constitutional law that no law is irrepealable, Congress,
in the legitimate exercise of its lawmaking powers, can enact a law withdrawing a tax exemption
just as efficaciously as it may grant the same under Section 28(4) of Article VI of the
Constitution. There is no gainsaying therefore that Congress can amend Section 131 of the NIRC
in a manner it sees fit, as it did when it passed R.A. No. 9334. Fifth. The rights granted under the
Certificates of Registration and Tax Exemption of private respondents are not absolute and
unconditional as to constitute rights in esse – those clearly founded on or granted by law or is
enforceable as a matter of law. These certificates granting private respondents a "permit to
operate" their respective businesses are in the nature of licenses, which the bulk of jurisprudence
considers as neither a property nor a property right. The licensee takes his license subject to
such conditions as the grantor sees fit to impose, including its revocation at pleasure. A license
can thus be revoked at any time since it does not confer an absolute right. While the tax
exemption contained in the Certificates of Registration of private respondents may have been
part of the inducement for carrying on their businesses in the SBF, this exemption, nevertheless,
is far from being contractual in nature in the sense that the non-impairment clause of the
Constitution can rightly be invoked. Sixth. Whatever right may have been acquired on the basis
of the Certificates of Registration and Tax Exemption must yield to the State’s valid exercise of
police power. It is well to remember that taxes may be made the implement of the police power.
It is not difficult to recognize that public welfare and necessity underlie the enactment of R.A. No.
9334. As petitioners point out, the now assailed provision was passed to curb the pernicious
practice of some unscrupulous business enterprises inside the SBF of using their tax exemption
privileges for smuggling purposes. Smuggling in whatever form is bad enough; it is worse when
the same is allegedly perpetrated, condoned or facilitated by enterprises hiding behind the cloak
of their tax exemption privileges. Seventh. As a rule, courts should avoid issuing a writ of
preliminary injunction which would in effect dispose of the main case without trial. This rule is
intended to preclude a prejudgment of the main case and a reversal of the rule on the burden of
proof since by issuing the injunctive writ, the court would assume the proposition that petitioners
are inceptively duty bound to prove. Eighth. A court may issue a writ of preliminary injunction
only when the petitioner assailing a statute has made out a case of unconstitutionality or
invalidity strong enough, in the mind of the judge, to overcome the presumption of validity, in
addition to a showing of a clear legal right to the remedy sought. Thus, it is not enough that
petitioners make out a case of unconstitutionality or invalidity to overcome the prima facie
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presumption of validity of a statute; they must also be able to show a clear legal right that ought
to be protected by the court. The issuance of the writ is therefore not proper when the
complainant’s right is doubtful or disputed. Ninth. The feared injurious effects of the imposition of
duties, charges and taxes on imported cigars, cigarettes, distilled spirits, fermented liquors and
wines on private respondents’ businesses cannot possibly outweigh the dire consequences that
the non-collection of taxes, not to mention the unabated smuggling inside the SBF, would wreak
on the government. Whatever damage would befall private respondents must perforce take a
back seat to the pressing need to curb smuggling and raise revenues for governmental functions.
All told, while the grant or denial of an injunction generally rests on the sound discretion of the
lower court, this Court may and should intervene in a clear case of abuse. One such case of
grave abuse obtained in this case when public respondent issued his Order of May 4, 2005 and
the Writ of Preliminary Injunction on May 11, 2005 despite the absence of a clear and
unquestioned legal right of private respondents. In holding that the presumption of
constitutionality and validity of R.A. No. 9334 was overcome by private respondents for the
reasons public respondent cited in his May 4, 2005 Order, he disregarded the fact that as a
condition sine qua non to the issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction, private respondents
needed also to show a clear legal right that ought to be protected. That requirement is not
satisfied in this case. To stress, the possibility of irreparable damage without proof of an actual
existing right would not justify an injunctive relief. Besides, private respondents are not
altogether lacking an appropriate relief under the law. As petitioners point out in their Petition
before this Court, private respondents may avail themselves of a tax refund or tax credit should
R.A. No. 9334 be finally declared invalid. Indeed, Sections 204 and 229 of the NIRC provide for
the recovery of erroneously or illegally collected taxes which would be the nature of the excise
taxes paid by private respondents should Section 6 of R.A. No. 9334 be declared unconstitutional
or invalid. It may not be amiss to add that private respondents can also opt not to import, or to
import less of, those items which no longer enjoy tax exemption under R.A. No. 9334 to avoid
the payment of taxes thereon. The Court finds that public respondent had also ventured into the
delicate area which courts are cautioned from taking when deciding applications for the issuance
of the writ of preliminary injunction. Having ruled preliminarily against the prima facie validity of
R.A. No. 9334, he assumed in effect the proposition that private respondents in their petition for
declaratory relief were duty bound to prove, thereby shifting to petitioners the burden of proving
that R.A. No. 9334 is not unconstitutional or invalid.
In the same vein, the Court finds public respondent to have overstepped his discretion when he
arbitrarily fixed the injunction bond of the SBF enterprises at only P1million. The alleged
sparseness of the testimony of Indigo Corporation’s representative on the injury to be suffered by
private respondents may be excused because evidence for a preliminary injunction need not be
conclusive or complete. Nonetheless, considering the number of private respondent enterprises
and the volume of their businesses, the injunction bond is undoubtedly not sufficient to answer
for the damages that the government was bound to suffer as a consequence of the suspension of
the implementation of the assailed provisions of R.A. No. 9334. Rule 58, Section 4(b) provides
that a bond is executed in favor of the party enjoined to answer for all damages which it may
sustain by reason of the injunction. The purpose of the injunction bond is to protect the
defendant against loss or damage by reason of the injunction in case the court finally decides
that the plaintiff was not entitled to it, and the bond is usually conditioned accordingly. Recalling
this Court’s pronouncements in Olalia v. Hizon that: x x x [T]here is no power the exercise of
which is more delicate, which requires greater caution, deliberation and sound discretion, or
more dangerous in a doubtful case, than the issuance of an injunction. It is the strong arm of
equity that should never be extended unless to cases of great injury, where courts of law cannot
afford an adequate or commensurate remedy in damages. Every court should remember that an
injunction is a limitation upon the freedom of action of the defendant and should not be granted
lightly or precipitately. It should be granted only when the court is fully satisfied that the law
permits it and the emergency demands it, It cannot be overemphasized that any injunction that
restrains the collection of taxes, which is the inevitable result of the suspension of the
implementation of the assailed Section 6 of R.A. No. 9334, is a limitation upon the right of the
government to its lifeline and wherewithal. The power to tax emanates from necessity; without
taxes, government cannot fulfill its mandate of promoting the general welfare and well-being of
the people. That the enforcement of tax laws and the collection of taxes are of paramount
importance for the sustenance of government has been repeatedly observed. Taxes being the
lifeblood of the government that should be collected without unnecessary hindrance, every
precaution must be taken not to unduly suppress it
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significant if the exercising authority were mere political subdivisions (since delegation by it to
such political subdivisions of one power does not necessarily include the other), would not be of
any moment when, as in the case under consideration, Congress itself exercises the power. All
that is to be done would be to apply and enforce the law when sufficiently definitive and not
constitutional infirm.
FACTS: Sometime in 1988, the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) served on the
Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT) the assessment notices and demands for
payment. The assessment for supervision and regulation fee under Section 40(e) made by NTC
for 1988, was computed at P0.50 per 100 of PLDTs outstanding capital stock. In its two letter-
protests dated February 23, 1988 and July 14, 1988, and position papers dated November 8,
1990 and March 12, 1991, respectively, the PLDT challenged the aforesaid assessments,
theorizing inter alia that:
(a) The assessments were being made to raise revenues and not as mere reimbursements for actual
regulatory expenses in violation of the doctrine in PLDT vs. PSC, 66 SCRA 341 [1975]; (b) The
assessment under Section 40 (e) should only have been on the basis of the par values of private
respondents outstanding capital stock; (c) Petitioner has no authority to compel private respondents
payment of the assessed fees under Section 40 (f) for the increase of its authorized capital stock since
petitioner did not render any supervisory or regulatory activity and incurred no expenses in relation
thereto.
ISSUE: Whether the fee under Section 40 (e) should be based on the market value of PLDTs
outstanding capital stock inclusive of stock dividends and premium, and not on the par value of
PLDTs capital stock excluding stock dividends and premium, as contended by PLDT. (NO)
RULING: Succinct and clear is the ruling of this Court in the case of Philippine Long Distance
Telephone Company vs. Public Service Commission, 66 SCRA 341, that the basis for computation
of the fee to be charged by NTC on PLDT, is the capital stock subscribed or paid and not,
alternatively, the property and equipment. The law in point is clear and categorical. There is no
room for construction. It simply calls for application. To repeat, the fee in question is based on
the capital stock subscribed or paid, nothing less nothing more. It bears stressing that it is not
the NTC that imposed such a fee. It is the legislature itself. Since Congress has the power to
exercise the State inherent powers of Police Power, Eminent Domain and Taxation, the distinction
between police power and the power to tax, which could be significant if the exercising authority
were mere political subdivisions (since delegation by it to such political subdivisions of one power
does not necessarily include the other), would not be of any moment when, as in the case under
consideration, Congress itself exercises the power. All that is to be done would be to apply and
enforce the law when sufficiently definitive and not constitutional infirm. The term capital and
other terms used to describe the capital structure of a corporation are of universal acceptance,
and their usages have long been established in jurisprudence. Briefly, capital refers to the value
of the property or assets of a corporation. The capital subscribed is the total amount of the
capital that persons (subscribers or shareholders) have agreed to take and pay for, which need
not necessarily be, and can be more than, the par value of the shares. In fine, it is the amount
that the corporation receives, inclusive of the premiums if any, in consideration of the original
issuance of the shares. In the case of stock dividends, it is the amount that the corporation
transfers from its surplus profit account to its capital account. It is the same amount that can
loosely be termed as the trust fund of the corporation. The Trust Fund doctrine considers this
subscribed capital as a trust fund for the payment of the debts of the corporation, to which the
creditors may look for satisfaction. Until the liquidation of the corporation, no part of the
subscribed capital may be returned or released to the stockholder (except in the redemption of
redeemable shares) without violating this principle. Thus, dividends must never impair the
subscribed capital; subscription commitments cannot be condoned or remitted; nor can the
corporation buy its own shares using the subscribed capital as the consideration therefor. In the
same way that the Court in PLDT vs. PSC has rejected the value of the property and equipment
as being the proper basis for the fee imposed by Section 40(e) of the Public Service Act, as
amended by Republic Act No. 3792, so also must the Court disallow the idea of computing the
fee on the par value of [PLDTs] capital stock subscribed or paid excluding stock dividends,
premiums, or capital in excess of par. Neither, however, is the assessment made by the National
Telecommunications Commission on the basis of the market value of the subscribed or paid-in
capital stock acceptable since it is itself a deviation from the explicit language of the law.
All things studiedly considered, and mindful of the aforesaid ruling of this Court in the case of
Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company vs. Public Service Commission, it should be
reiterated that the proper basis for the computation of subject fee under Section 40(e) of the
Public Service Act, as amended by Republic Act No. 3792, is the capital stock subscribed or paid
and not, alternatively, the property and equipment.
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- Paseo Realty and Dev’t. Corp. v. CA, 309 SCRA 402
An assessment contains not only a computation of tax liabilities, but also a demand for payment
within a prescribed period. It also signals the time when penalties and protests begin to accrue
against the taxpayer. To enable the taxpayer to determine his remedies thereon, due process
requires that it must be served on and received by the taxpayer. Accordingly, an affidavit, which
was executed by revenue officers stating the tax liabilities of a taxpayer and attached to a
criminal complaint for tax evasion, cannot be deemed an assessment that can be questioned
before the Court of Tax Appeals. It should also be stressed that the said document is a notice
duly sent to the taxpayer. Indeed, an assessment is deemed made only when the collector of
internal revenue releases, mails or sends such notice to the taxpayer. In the present case, the
revenue officers' Affidavit merely contained a computation of respondents' tax liability. It did not
state a demand or a period for payment. Worse, it was addressed to the justice secretary, not to
the taxpayers.
FACTS: It appears that by virtue of Letter of Authority No. 001198, then BIR Commissioner Jose
U. Ong authorized Revenue Officers Thomas T. Que, Sonia T. Estorco and Emmanuel M.
Savellano to examine the books of accounts and other accounting records of Pascor Realty and
Development Corporation. (PRDC) for the years ending 1986, 1987 and 1988. The said
examination resulted in a recommendation for the issuance of an assessment in the amounts of
P7,498,434.65 and P3,015,236.35 for the years 1986 and 1987, respectively. On March 1, 1995,
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue filed a criminal complaint before the Department of Justice
against the PRDC, its President Rogelio A. Dio, and its Treasurer Virginia S. Dio, alleging evasion
of taxes in the total amount of P10,513,671 .00. Private respondents PRDC, et. al. filed an Urgent
Request for Reconsideration/Reinvestigation disputing the tax assessment and tax liability. On
March 23, 1995, private respondents received a subpoena from the DOJ in connection with the
criminal complaint filed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (BIR) against them. In a letter
dated May 17, 1995, the CIR denied the urgent request for reconsideration/reinvestigation of the
private respondents on the ground that no formal assessment of the has as yet been issued by
the Commissioner. Private respondents then elevated the Decision of the CIR dated May 17,
1995 to the Court of Tax Appeals on a petition for review docketed as CTA Case No. 5271 on July
21, 1995. On September 6, 1995, the CIR filed a Motion to Dismiss the petition on the ground
that the CTA has no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the petition, as there was no formal
assessment issued against the petitioners. The CTA denied the said motion to dismiss in a
Resolution dated January 25, 1996 and ordered the CIR to file an answer within thirty (30) days
from receipt of said resolution.
ISSUE: Whether the revenue officers' Affidavit-Report, which was attached to criminal revenue
Complaint filed the Department of Justice, constituted an assessment. (NO)
RULING: We agree with petitioner. Neither the NIRC nor the regulations governing the protest of
assessments provide a specific definition or form of an assessment. However, the NIRC defines
the specific functions and effects of an assessment. To consider the affidavit attached to the
Complaint as a proper assessment is to subvert the nature of an assessment and to set a bad
precedent that will prejudice innocent taxpayers. True, as pointed out by the private
respondents, an assessment informs the taxpayer that he or she has tax liabilities. But not all
documents coming from the BIR containing a computation of the tax liability can be deemed
assessments. To start with, an assessment must be sent to and received by a taxpayer, and must
demand payment of the taxes described therein within a specific period. Thus, the NIRC imposes
a 25 percent penalty, in addition to the tax due, in case the taxpayer fails to pay deficiency tax
within the time prescribed for its payment in the notice of assessment. Likewise, an interest of 20
percent per annum, or such higher rates as may be prescribed by rules and regulations, is to be
collected form the date prescribed for its payment until the full payment. The issuance of an
assessment is vital in determining, the period of limitation regarding its proper issuance and the
period within which to protest it. Section 203 of the NIRC provides that internal revenue taxes
must be assessed within three years from the last day within which to file the return. Section
222, on the other hand, specifies a period of ten years in case a fraudulent return with intent to
evade was submitted or in case of failure to file a return. Also, Section 228 of the same law
states that said assessment may be protested only within thirty days from receipt thereof.
Necessarily, the taxpayer must be certain that a specific document constitutes an assessment.
Otherwise, confusion would arise regarding the period within which to make an assessment or to
protest the same, or whether interest and penalty may accrue thereon. It should also be stressed
that the said document is a notice duly sent to the taxpayer. Indeed, an assessment is deemed
made only when the collector of internal revenue releases, mails or sends such notice to the
taxpayer. In the present case, the revenue officers' Affidavit merely contained a computation of
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respondents' tax liability. It did not state a demand or a period for payment. Worse, it was
addressed to the justice secretary, not to the taxpayers. Respondents maintain that an
assessment, in relation to taxation, is simply understood' to mean: A notice to the effect that the
amount therein stated is due as tax and a demand for payment thereof. Fixes the liability of the
taxpayer and ascertains the facts and furnishes the data for the proper presentation of tax rolls.
Even these definitions fail to advance private respondents' case. That the BIR examiners' Joint
Affidavit attached to the Criminal Complaint contained some details of the tax liabilities of private
respondents does not ipso facto make it an assessment. The purpose of the Joint Affidavit was
merely to support and substantiate the Criminal Complaint for tax evasion. Clearly, it was not
meant to be a notice of the tax due and a demand to the private respondents for payment
thereof. The fact that the Complaint itself was specifically directed and sent to the Department of
Justice and not to private respondents shows that the intent of the commissioner was to file a
criminal complaint for tax evasion, not to issue an assessment. Although the revenue officers
recommended the issuance of an assessment, the commissioner opted instead to file a criminal
case for tax evasion. What private respondents received was a notice from the DOJ that a
criminal case for tax evasion had been filed against them, not a notice that the Bureau of
Internal Revenue had made an assessment.
Fact: The material portions of which state that, first, both Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27 embrace
or cover the same subject matter and the production tax rates imposed therein are practically the
same, and second, that on January 17, 1963, the acting Municipal Treasurer of Tanauan, Leyte,
as per his letter addressed to the Manager of the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Plant in said municipality,
sought to enforce compliance by the latter of the provisions of said Ordinance No. 27, series of
1962. Municipal Ordinance No. 23, of Tanauan, Leyte, which was approved on September 25,
1962, levies and collects "from soft drinks producers and manufacturers a tai of one-sixteenth
(1/16) of a centavo for every bottle of soft drink corked." For the purpose of computing the taxes
due, the person, firm, company or corporation producing soft drinks shall submit to the Municipal
Treasurer a monthly report, of the total number of bottles produced and corked during the
month. On the other hand, Municipal Ordinance No. 27, which was approved on October 28,
1962, levies and collects "on soft drinks produced or manufactured within the territorial
jurisdiction of this municipality a tax of ONE CENTAVO (P0.01) on each gallon (128 fluid ounces,
U.S.) of volume capacity." For the purpose of computing the taxes due, the person, fun
company, partnership, corporation or plant producing soft drinks shall submit to the Municipal
Treasurer a monthly report of the total number of gallons produced or manufactured during the
month. The tax imposed in both Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27 is denominated as "municipal
production tax.'
ISSUE: Whether Section 2 of Republic Act No. 2264 is an undue delegation of power, confiscatory
and oppressive. (NO)
RULING:
The power of taxation is an essential and inherent attribute of sovereignty, belonging as a matter
of right to every independent government, without being expressly conferred by the people. It is
a power that is purely legislative and which the central legislative body cannot delegate either to
the executive or judicial department of the government without infringing upon the theory of
separation of powers. The exception, however, lies in the case of municipal corporations, to
which, said theory does not apply. Legislative powers may be delegated to local governments in
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respect of matters of local concern. This is sanctioned by immemorial practice. By necessary
implication, the legislative power to create political corporations for purposes of local self-
government carries with it the power to confer on such local governmental agencies the power to
tax. Under the New Constitution, local governments are granted the autonomous authority to
create their own sources of revenue and to levy taxes. Section 5, Article XI provides: "Each local
government unit shall have the power to create its sources of revenue and to levy taxes, subject
to such limitations as may be provided by law." Withal, it cannot be said that Section 2 of
Republic Act No. 2264 emanated from beyond the sphere of the legislative power to enact and
vest in local governments the power of local taxation. The plenary nature of the taxing power
thus delegated, contrary to plaintiff-appellant's pretense, would not suffice to invalidate the said
law as confiscatory and oppressive. In delegating the authority, the State is not limited 6 the
exact measure of that which is exercised by itself. When it is said that the taxing power may be
delegated to municipalities and the like, it is meant that there may be delegated such measure of
power to impose and collect taxes as the legislature may deem expedient. Thus, municipalities
may be permitted to tax subjects which for reasons of public policy the State has not deemed
wise to tax for more general purposes. This is not to say though that the constitutional injunction
against deprivation of property without due process of law may be passed over under the guise
of the taxing power, except when the taking of the property is in the lawful exercise of the taxing
power, as when (1) the tax is for a public purpose; (2) the rule on uniformity of taxation is
observed; (3) either the person or property taxed is within the jurisdiction of the government
levying the tax; and (4) in the assessment and collection of certain kinds of taxes notice and
opportunity for hearing are provided. Due process is usually violated where the tax imposed is for
a private as distinguished from a public purpose; a tax is imposed on property outside the State,
i.e., extraterritorial taxation; and arbitrary or oppressive methods are used in assessing and
collecting taxes. But, a tax does not violate the due process clause, as applied to a particular
taxpayer, although the purpose of the tax will result in an injury rather than a benefit to such
taxpayer. Due process does not require that the property subject to the tax or the amount of tax
to be raised should be determined by judicial inquiry, and a notice and hearing as to the amount
of the tax and the manner in which it shall be apportioned are generally not necessary to due
process of law. There is no validity to the assertion that the delegated authority can be declared
unconstitutional on the theory of double taxation. It must be observed that the delegating
authority specifies the limitations and enumerates the taxes over which local taxation may not be
exercised. The reason is that the State has exclusively reserved the same for its own prerogative.
Moreover, double taxation, in general, is not forbidden by our fundamental law, since We have
not adopted as part thereof the injunction against double taxation found in the Constitution of
the United States and some states of the Union. Double taxation becomes obnoxious only where
the taxpayer is taxed twice for the benefit of the same governmental entity or by the same
jurisdiction for the same purpose, but not in a case where one tax is imposed by the State and
the other by the city or municipality.
FACTS: Respondent is a domestic corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of
the laws of the Republic of the Philippines. It is engaged in manufacturing of various cigarette
brands. The cigarette brands manufactured by the Respondent were subject to ad valorem tax
pursuant to then Section 142 of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended. However, on January 1,
1997, R.A. No. 8240 took effect whereby a shift from the ad valorem tax (AVT) system to the
specific tax system was made and subjecting the aforesaid cigarette brands to specific tax under
[S]ection 142 thereof, now renumbered as Sec. 145 of the Tax Code of 1997. Sec. 145 provides,
among others, that the rates of excise tax on cigars and cigarettes under paragraphs (1), (2) (3)
Page 10 of 113
and (4) hereof, shall be increased by twelve percent (12%) on January 1, 2000. To implement
the provisions for a twelve percent (12%) increase of excise tax on, among others, cigars and
cigarettes packed by machines by January 1, 2000, the Secretary of Finance, upon
recommendation of the respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue, issued Revenue
Regulations No. 17-99, dated December 16, 1999. Revenue Regulations No. 17-99 likewise
provides in the last paragraph of Section 1 thereof, "(t)hat the new specific tax rate for any
existing brand of cigars, cigarettes packed by machine, distilled spirits, wines and fermented
liquor shall not be lower than the excise tax that is actually being paid prior to January 1, 2000."
On February 7, 2000, respondent filed with petitioner’s Appellate Division a claim for refund or
tax credit of its purportedly overpaid excise tax for the month of January 2000 in the amount of
₱35,651,410. As there was no action on the part of the petitioner, respondent filed the instant
petition for review with the Court of Appeals on December 11, 2001, in order to comply with the
two-year period for filing a claim for refund. In his answer filed on January 16, 2002, petitioner
raised as Special and Affirmative Defenses, among others, that the last paragraph of Section 1 of
Revenue Regulation[s] [No.]17-99 is a valid implementing regulation which has the force and
effect of law.
ISSUE: Whether the revenue regulation has exceeded the allowable limits of legislative
delegation. (YES)
RULING: The power to tax is inherent in the State, such power being inherently legislative, based
on the principle that taxes are a grant of the people who are taxed, and the grant must be made
by the immediate representatives of the people; and where the people have laid the power, there
it must remain and be exercised. Section 145 of the Tax Code mandates a 12% increase effective
on 1 January 2000 based on the taxes indicated under paragraph C, sub-paragraph (1)-(4).
However, Revenue Regulation No. 17-99 went further and added that "[T]he new specific tax
rate for any existing brand of cigars, cigarettes packed by machine, distilled spirits, wines and
fermented liquor shall not be lower than the excise tax that is actually being paid prior to January
1, 2000." Parenthetically, Section 145 states that during the transition period, i.e., within the next
three (3) years from the effectivity of the Tax Code, the excise tax from any brand of cigarettes
shall not be lower than the tax due from each brand on 1 October 1996. This qualification,
however, is conspicuously absent as regards the 12% increase which is to be applied on cigars
and cigarettes packed by machine, among others, effective on 1 January 2000. Clearly and
unmistakably, Section 145 mandates a new rate of excise tax for cigarettes packed by machine
due to the 12% increase effective on 1 January 2000 without regard to whether the revenue
collection starting from this period may turn out to be lower than that collected prior to this date.
By adding the qualification that the tax due after the 12% increase becomes effective shall not
be lower than the tax actually paid prior to 1 January 2000, Revenue Regulation No. 17-99
effectively imposes a tax which is the higher amount between the ad valorem tax being paid at
the end of the three (3)-year transition period and the specific tax under paragraph C, sub-
paragraph (1)-(4), as increased by 12%—a situation not supported by the plain wording of
Section 145 of the Tax Code. This is not the first time that national revenue officials had ventured
in the area of unauthorized administrative legislation. In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v.
Reyes, respondent was not informed in writing of the law and the facts on which the assessment
of estate taxes was made pursuant to Section 228 of the 1997 Tax Code, as amended by
Republic Act (R.A.) No. 8424. She was merely notified of the findings by the Commissioner, who
had simply relied upon the old provisions of the law and Revenue Regulation No. 12-85 which
was based on the old provision of the law. The Court held that in case of discrepancy between
the law as amended and the implementing regulation based on the old law, the former
necessarily prevails. The law must still be followed, even though the existing tax regulation at
that time provided for a different procedure. In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Central
Luzon Drug Corporation, the tax authorities gave the term "tax credit" in Sections 2(i) and 4 of
Revenue Regulation 2-94 a meaning utterly disparate from what R.A. No. 7432 provides. Their
interpretation muddled up the intent of Congress to grant a mere discount privilege and not a
sales discount. The Court, striking down the revenue regulation, held that an administrative
agency issuing regulations may not enlarge, alter or restrict the provisions of the law it
administers, and it cannot engraft additional requirements not contemplated by the legislature.
The Court emphasized that tax administrators are not allowed to expand or contract the
legislative mandate and that the "plain meaning rule" or verba legis in statutory construction
should be applied such that where the words of a statute are clear, plain and free from
ambiguity, it must be given its literal meaning and applied without attempted interpretation. As
we have previously declared, rule-making power must be confined to details for regulating the
mode or proceedings in order to carry into effect the law as it has been enacted, and it cannot be
extended to amend or expand the statutory requirements or to embrace matters not covered by
the statute. Administrative regulations must always be in harmony with the provisions of the law
Page 11 of 113
because any resulting discrepancy between the two will always be resolved in favor of the basic
law. In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Michel J. Lhuillier Pawnshop, Inc., Commissioner
Jose Ong issued Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 15-91, as well as the clarificatory
Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) 43-91, imposing a 5% lending investor’s tax under the
1977 Tax Code, as amended by Executive Order (E.O.) No. 273, on pawnshops. The
Commissioner anchored the imposition on the definition of lending investors provided in the 1977
Tax Code which, according to him, was broad enough to include pawnshop operators. However,
the Court noted that pawnshops and lending investors were subjected to different tax treatments
under the Tax Code prior to its amendment by the executive order; that Congress never intended
to treat pawnshops in the same way as lending investors; and that the particularly involved
section of the Tax Code explicitly subjected lending investors and dealers in securities only to
percentage tax. And so the Court affirmed the invalidity of the challenged circulars, stressing that
"administrative issuances must not override, supplant or modify the law, but must remain
consistent with the law they intend to carry out." In Philippine Bank of Communications v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the then acting Commissioner issued RMC 7-85, changing the
prescriptive period of two years to ten years for claims of excess quarterly income tax payments,
thereby creating a clear inconsistency with the provision of Section 230 of the 1977 Tax Code.
The Court nullified the circular, ruling that the BIR did not simply interpret the law; rather it
legislated guidelines contrary to the statute passed by Congress. The Court held: It bears
repeating that Revenue memorandum-circulars are considered administrative rulings (in the
sense of more specific and less general interpretations of tax laws) which are issued from time to
time by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. It is widely accepted that the interpretation
placed upon a statute by the executive officers, whose duty is to enforce it, is entitled to great
respect by the courts. Nevertheless, such interpretation is not conclusive and will be ignored if
judicially found to be erroneous. Thus, courts will not countenance administrative issuances that
override, instead of remaining consistent and in harmony with, the law they seek to apply and
implement. In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. CA, et al., the central issue was the validity
of RMO 4-87 which had construed the amnesty coverage under E.O. No. 41 (1986) to include
only assessments issued by the BIR after the promulgation of the executive order on 22 August
1986 and not assessments made to that date. Resolving the issue in the negative, the Court
held: x x x all such issuances must not override, but must remain consistent and in harmony
with, the law they seek to apply and implement. Administrative rules and regulations are
intended to carry out, neither to supplant nor to modify, the law. x x x If, as the Commissioner
argues, Executive Order No. 41 had not been intended to include 1981- 1985 tax liabilities
already assessed (administratively) prior to 22 August 1986, the law could have simply so
provided in its exclusionary clauses. It did not. The conclusion is unavoidable, and it is that the
executive order has been designed to be in the nature of a general grant of tax amnesty subject
only to the cases specifically excepted by it. In the case at bar, the OSG’s argument that by 1
January 2000, the excise tax on cigarettes should be the higher tax imposed under the specific
tax system and the tax imposed under the ad valorem tax system plus the 12% increase imposed
by paragraph 5, Section 145 of the Tax Code, is an unsuccessful attempt to justify what is clearly
an impermissible incursion into the limits of administrative legislation. Such an interpretation is
not supported by the clear language of the law and is obviously only meant to validate the OSG’s
thesis that Section 145 of the Tax Code is ambiguous and admits of several interpretations. The
contention that the increase of 12% starting on 1 January 2000 does not apply to the brands of
cigarettes listed under Annex "D" is likewise unmeritorious, absurd even. Paragraph 8, Section
145 of the Tax Code simply states that, "[T]he classification of each brand of cigarettes based on
its average net retail price as of October 1, 1996, as set forth in Annex ‘D’, shall remain in force
until revised by Congress." This declaration certainly does not lend itself to the interpretation
given to it by the OSG. As plainly worded, the average net retail prices of the listed brands under
Annex "D," which classify cigarettes according to their net retail price into low, medium or high,
obviously remain the bases for the application of the increase in excise tax rates effective on 1
January 2000. The foregoing leads us to conclude that Revenue Regulation No. 17-99 is indeed
indefensibly flawed. The Commissioner cannot seek refuge in his claim that the purpose behind
the passage of the Tax Code is to generate additional revenues for the government. Revenue
generation has undoubtedly been a major consideration in the passage of the Tax Code.
However, as borne by the legislative record, the shift from the ad valorem system to the specific
tax system is likewise meant to promote fair competition among the players in the industries
concerned, to ensure an equitable distribution of the tax burden and to simplify tax
administration by classifying cigarettes, amongothers, into high, medium and low-priced based
on their net retail price and accordingly graduating tax rates.
Page 12 of 113
rates of tax upon his income arising from the exercise of his profession vis-a-vis those which are
imposed upon fixed income or salaried individual taxpayers. He characterizes said provision as
arbitrary amounting to class legislation, oppressive and capricious in character. It therefore
violates both the equal protection and due process clauses of the Constitution as well asof the
rule requiring uniformity in taxation.
Issue: Whether or not the assailed provision violates the equal protection and due process
clauses of the Constitution while also violating the rule that taxes must be uniform and equitable.
FACTS: It appears that on March 14 and 15, 1989, the respondents caused the publication of a
notice of auction sale involving the properties of NAPOCOR and the Philippine Geothermal Inc.
consisting of buildings, machines, and similar improvements standing on their offices at Tiwi,
Albay. The amounts to be realized from this advertised auction sale are supposed to be applied
to the tax delinquencies claimed, as and for, as we said, real property taxes. The back taxes
NAPOCOR has supposedly accumulated were computed at P214,845,184.76. NAPOCOR opposed
the sale, interposing in support of its non-liability Resolution No. 17-87, of the Fiscal Incentives
Review Board (FIRB), which provides as follows: BE IT RESOLVED, AS IT IS HEREBY RESOLVED,
That the tax and duty exemption privileges of the National Power Corporation, including those
pertaining to its domestic purchases of petroleum and petroleum products, granted under the
terms and conditions of Commonwealth Act No. 120 (Creating the National Power Corporation,
defining its powers, objectives and functions, and for other purposes), as amended, are restored
effective March 10, 1987, subject to the following conditions: as well as the Memorandum of
Executive Secretary Catalino Macaraig, which also states thus: Pursuant to Sections 1 (f) and 2
(e) of Executive Order No. 93, series of 1986, FIRB Resolution No. 17-87, series of 1987,
restoring, subject to certain conditions prescribed therein, the tax and duty exemption privileges
of NPC as provided under Commonwealth Act No. 120, as amended, effective March 10, 1987, is
hereby confirmed and approved. The provincial government of Albay now defends the auction
sale in question on the theory that the various FIRB issuances constitute an undue delegation of
the taxing Power and hence, null and void, under the Constitution. It is also contended that,
insofar as Executive Order No. 93 authorizes the FIRB to grant tax exemptions, the same is of no
force and effect under the constitutional provision allowing the legislature alone to accord tax
exemption privileges. It is to be stressed that the provincial government of Albay admits that as
of March 10, 1987 (the date Resolution No. 17-87 was affirmed by the Memorandum of the
Office of the President, dated October 5, 1987), NAPOCOR's exemption had been validly
restored. What it questions is NAPOCOR's liability in the interregnum between June 11, 1984, the
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date its tax privileges were withdrawn, and March 10, 1987, the date they were purportedly
restored. To be sure, it objects to Executive Order No. 93 as alledgedly a delegation of legislative
power, but only insofar as its (NAPOCOR's) June 11, 1984 to March 10, 1987 tax accumulation is
concerned.
ISSUE: Whether NAPOCOR should be held liable for taxes during the interregnum between June
11, 1984, the date its tax privileges were withdrawn, and March 10, 1987, the date they were
purportedly restored. (YES)
RULING:
NAPOCOR must then be held liable for the intervening years aforesaid. So it has been held: The
last issue to be resolved is whether or not the private-respondent is liable for the fixed and
deficiency percentage taxes in the amount of P3,025.96 (i.e. for the period from January 1, 1946
to February 29, 1948) before the approval of its municipal franchises. As aforestated, the
franchises were approved by the President only on February 24,1948. Therefore, before the said
date, the NAPOCOR was liable for the payment of percentage and fixed taxes as seller of light,
heat, and power which, as the respondent claims, amounted to P3,025.96. The legislative
franchise (R.A. No. 3843) exempted the grantee from all kinds of taxes other than the 2% tax
from the date the original franchise was granted. The exemption, therefore, did not cover the
period before the franchise was granted, i.e. before February 24, 1948. To all intents and
purposes, real property taxes are funds taken by the State with one hand and given to the other.
In no measure can the Government be said to have lost anything. As a rule finally, claims of tax
exemption are construed strongly against the claimant. They must also be shown to exist clearly
and categorically, and supported by clear legal provisions. Taxes are the lifeblood of the nation.
Their primary purpose is to generate funds for the State to finance the needs of the citizenry and
to advance the common wealth.
FACTS: Atanasio Pineda died, survived by his wife, Felicisima Bagtas, and 15 children, the eldest
of whom is Manuel B. Pineda, a lawyer. Estate proceedings were had in the Court of First
Instance of Manila wherein the surviving widow was appointed administratrix. The estate was
divided among and awarded to the heirs and the proceedings terminated on June 8, 1948.
Manuel B. Pineda's share amounted to about P2, 500.00. After the estate proceedings were
closed, the Bureau of Internal Revenue investigated the income tax liability of the estate for the
years 1945, 1946, 1947 and 1948 and it found that the corresponding income tax returns were
not filed. Thereupon, the representative of the Collector of Internal Revenue filed said returns for
the estate on the basis of information and data obtained from the aforesaid estate proceedings
and issued an assessment for deficiency taxes. Manuel B. Pineda, who received the assessment,
contested the same. Subsequently, he appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals alleging that he was
appealing "only that proportionate part or portion pertaining to him as one of the heirs." The
Court of Tax Appeals rendered judgment reversing the decision of the Commissioner on the
ground that his right to assess and collect the tax has prescribed. The Commissioner appealed
and this Court affirmed the findings of the Tax Court in respect to the assessment for income tax
for the year 1947 but held that the right to assess and collect the taxes for 1945 and 1946 has
not prescribed. Accordingly, the case was remanded to the Tax Court for further appropriate
proceedings. On November 29, 1963 the Court of Tax Appeals rendered judgment holding
Manuel B. Pineda liable for the payment corresponding to his share of the deficiency taxes. The
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue has appealed this case before the SC and has proposed to
hold Manuel B. Pineda liable for the payment of all the taxes found by the Tax Court to be due
from the estate in the total amount of P760.28 instead of only for the amount of taxes
corresponding to his share in the estate. Manuel B. Pineda opposes the proposition on the
ground that as an heir he is liable for unpaid income tax due the estate only up to the extent of
and in proportion to any share he received.
ISSUE: Whether or not Pineda can be held liable for the payment of all the taxes found by the
Tax Court to be due from the estate of his deceased father? (YES)
RULING: We hold that the Government can require Manuel B. Pineda to pay the full amount of
the taxes assessed. Pineda is liable for the assessment as an heir and as a holder-transferee of
property belonging to the estate/taxpayer. As an heir he is individually answerable for the part of
the tax proportionate to the share he received from the inheritance. His liability, however, cannot
exceed the amount of his share.4 As a holder of property belonging to the estate, Pineda is liable
for the tax up to the amount of the property in his possession. The reason is that the
Government has a lien on the P2, 500.00 received by him from the estate as his share in the
inheritance, for unpaid income taxes for which said estate is liable, pursuant to the last
paragraph of Section 315 of the Tax Code. By virtue of such lien, the Government has the right
to subject the property in Pineda's possession, i.e., the P2, 500.00, to satisfy the income tax
assessment in the sum of P760.28. After such payment, Pineda will have a right of contribution
from his co-heirs, to achieve an adjustment of the proper share of each heir in the distributable
estate. All told, the Government has two ways of collecting the tax in question. One, by going
after all the heirs and collecting from each one of them the amount of the tax proportionate to
the inheritance received. This remedy was adopted in Government of the Philippine Islands v.
Pamintuan, supra. In said case, the Government filed an action against all the heirs for the
collection of the tax. This action rests on the concept that hereditary property consists only of
that part which remains after the settlement of all lawful claims against the estate, for the
settlement of which the entire estate is first liable. The reason why in case suit is filed against all
the heirs the tax due from the estate is levied proportionately against them is to achieve thereby
two results: first, payment of the tax; and second, adjustment of the shares of each heir in the
distributed estate as lessened by the tax. Another remedy, pursuant to the lien created by
Section 315 of the Tax Code upon all property and rights to property belonging to the taxpayer
for unpaid income tax, is by subjecting said property of the estate which is in the hands of an
heir or transferee to the payment of the tax due, the estate. This second remedy is the very
avenue the Government took in this case to collect the tax. The Bureau of Internal Revenue
should be given, in instances like the case at bar, the necessary discretion to avail itself of the
most expeditious way to collect the tax as may be envisioned in the particular provision of the
Tax Code above quoted, because taxes are the lifeblood of government and their prompt and
certain availability is an imperious need. And as afore-stated in this case the suit seeks to achieve
only one objective: payment of the tax. The adjustment of the respective shares due to the heirs
from the inheritance, as lessened by the tax, is left to await the suit for contribution by the heir
from whom the Government recovered said tax.
FACTS:
The Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., entered into reinsurance contracts, on various dates, with
foreign insurance companies not doing business in the Philippines, thereby agreed to cede to the
foreign reinsurers a portion of the premiums on insurance it has originally underwritten in the
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Philippines, in consideration for the assumption by the latter of liability on an equivalent portion
of the risks insured. Said reinsurrance contracts were signed by Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc. in
Manila and by the foreign reinsurers outside the Philippines, except the contract with Swiss
Reinsurance Company, which was signed by both parties in Switzerland. The reinsurance
contracts made the commencement of the reinsurers' liability simultaneous with that of Philippine
Guaranty Co., Inc. under the original insurance. Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc. was required to
keep a register in Manila where the risks ceded to the foreign reinsurers where entered, and
entry therein was binding upon the reinsurers. A proportionate amount of taxes on insurance
premiums not recovered from the original assured were to be paid for by the foreign reinsurers.
The foreign reinsurers further agreed, in consideration for managing or administering their affairs
in the Philippines, to compensate the Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., in an amount equal to 5% of
the reinsurance premiums. Pursuant to the aforesaid reinsurance contracts, Philippine Guaranty
Co., Inc. ceded to the foreign reinsurers premiums. Said premiums were excluded by Philippine
Guaranty Co., Inc. from its gross income when it filed its income tax returns for 1953 and 1954.
Furthermore, it did not withhold or pay tax on them. Consequently, per letter dated April 13,
1959, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed against Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc.
withholding tax on the ceded reinsurance premiums. Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc. protested the
assessment on the ground that reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers not doing
business in the Philippines are not subject to withholding tax. Its protest was denied and it
appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals. The Court of Tax Appeals rendered judgment ordering
petitioner Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc. to pay to the CIR the withholding income taxes for the
years 1953 and 1954, plus the statutory delinquency penalties thereon. Philippine Guaranty Co,
Inc. has appealed, questioning the legality of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue's
assessment for withholding tax on the reinsurance premiums ceded in 1953 and 1954 to the
foreign reinsurers. Petitioner maintains that the reinsurance premiums in question did not
constitute income from sources within the Philippines because the foreign reinsurers did not
engage in business in the Philippines, nor did they have office here.
ISSUE: Whether or not the reinsurance premiums in question constitute income from sources
within the Philippines? (YES)
RULING: The reinsurance contracts show that the transactions or activities that constituted the
undertaking to reinsure Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc. against lose arising from the original
insurances in the Philippines was performed in the Philippines. Section 24 of the Tax Code
subjects foreign corporations to tax on their income from sources within the Philippines. The
word "sources" has been interpreted as the activity, property or service giving rise to the income.
The reinsurance premiums were income created from the undertaking of the foreign reinsurance
companies to reinsure Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., against liability for loss under original
insurances. Such undertaking, as explained above, took place in the Philippines. These insurance
premiums, therefore, came from sources within the Philippines and, hence, are subject to
corporate income tax. The foreign insurers' place of business should not be confused with their
place of activity. Business should not be continuity and progression of transactions while activity
may consist of only a single transaction. An activity may occur outside the place of business.
Section 24 of the Tax Code does not require a foreign corporation to engage in business in the
Philippines in subjecting its income to tax. It suffices that the activity creating the income is
performed or done in the Philippines. What is controlling, therefore, is not the place of business
but the place of activity that created an income. Petitioner further contends that the reinsurance
premiums are not income from sources within the Philippines because they are not specifically
mentioned in Section 37 of the Tax Code. Section 37 is not an all-inclusive enumeration, for it
merely directs that the kinds of income mentioned therein should be treated as income from
sources within the Philippines but it does not require that other kinds of income should not be
considered likewise. The power to tax is an attribute of sovereignty. It is a power emanating from
necessity. It is a necessary burden to preserve the State's sovereignty and a means to give the
citizenry an army to resist an aggression, a navy to defend its shores from invasion, a corps of
civil servants to serve, public improvement designed for the enjoyment of the citizenry and those
which come within the State's territory, and facilities and protection which a government is
supposed to provide. Considering that the reinsurance premiums in question were afforded
protection by the government and the recipient foreign reinsurer’s exercised rights and privileges
guaranteed by our laws, such reinsurance premiums and reinsurers should share the burden of
maintaining the state. In respect to the question of whether or not reinsurance premiums ceded
to foreign reinsurers not doing business in the Philippines are subject to withholding tax under
Section 53 and 54 of the Tax Code, suffice it to state that this question has already been
answered in the affirmative in Alexander Howden & Co., Ltd. vs. Collector of Internal Revenue, L-
19393, April 14, 1965. Finally, petitioner contends that the withholding tax should be computed
from the amount actually remitted to the foreign reinsurers instead of from the total amount
Page 16 of 113
ceded. And since it did not remit any amount to its foreign insurers in 1953 and 1954, no
withholding tax was due. Section 54 of the Tax Code allows no deduction from the income
therein enumerated in determining the amount to be withheld. According, in computing the
withholding tax due on the reinsurance premium in question, no deduction shall be recognized
The facts, which are not disputed, are, as summarized by the Court, as follows:
The facts established in this case show that petitioner did not file income tax returns for the calendar
years 1945 and 1946. This fact having come to the knowledge of revenue examiners, they accordingly
made income tax returns for petitioner upon which respondent on August 20, 1948, assessed against and
demanded from petitioner the sums of P134.14 and P7,563.28 representing alleged income taxes and
corresponding surcharges for the years 1945 and 1946. On September 1, 1948, petitioner wrote the
respondent, requesting that he be informed as to how the assessments were arrived at. In reply thereto,
respondent in a letter dated September 17, 1948 furnished the information sought and at the same time
demanded the payment of the aforesaid assessments. On October 4, 1948, petitioner asked that he be
given an opportunity to present his side of the matter. However, respondent on December 13, 1948,
denied reconsideration of the assessment and reiterated his demand upon petitioner for payment thereof
which was followed with another demand on June 29, 1949. On July 28, 1949, petitioner once more
requested for a reinvestigation of the case but the same was denied by respondent in his letter dated
February 7, 1951 wherein he repeated his demand for payment. On April 3, 1951, petitioner renewed his
request for reinvestigation and nothing was heard of the matter for almost three years thereafter.
On January 6, 1953, respondent issued a warrant of distraint and levy upon petitioner's properties which,
however, was not executed. On January 16, 1953 petitioner sought the withdrawal and/or
reconsideration of said warrant. Meanwhile, on July 2, 1953, respondent issued a revised assessment
notice which reduced the original assessment for the 1946 income tax to P2,447.30, including surcharge.
On July 18, 1953, petitioner asked that he be informed of the action upon his petition for reinvestigation.
This request was reiterated in his letter of August 18, 1953 wherein he acknowledged receipt of the
modified assessment for the 1946 income tax. On September 1, 1953, respondent wrote petitioner
demanding from the latter payment of the said sum of P2,447.30 as income tax for the year 1946 plus
penalties incident to delinquency, and reiterating the demand for the unrevised income tax assessment
for 1945 in the sum of P134.14, but respondent did not take any further action thereafter to effect
collection of the assessment.
On January 20, 1955, respondent again issued a warrant of distraint and levy on the properties of
petitioner, this time only to effect collection of the said sum of P2,447.80 as income tax for 1946. The
distraint being still enforce, petitioner on December 12, 1955 filed his petition for prohibition with this
Court.
The petitioner Collector of Internal Revenue assails the jurisdiction of the respondent Court of Tax
Appeals to take cognizance of the respondent taxpayer's petition that seeks to enjoin him (the petitioner)
from collecting his income taxes due for the years 1945 and 1946 and surcharges by summary distraint
of and levy upon his personal and real properties, under the provisions of sections 316 to 330 of the
National Internal Revenue Code. The petitioner's contention is that the respondent taxpayer cannot bring
in the respondent Court an independent special civil action for prohibition without taking to said Court an
appeal from the decision or ruling of the Collector of Internal Revenue in the cases provided for in
sections 7 and 11 of Republic Act No. 1125.
Sections 7, 9 and 11 of Republic No. 1125, creating the Court of Tax Appeals, provides:
SEC. 7. Jurisdiction. — The Court of Tax Appeals shall exercise exclusive appellate jurisdiction to review
by appeal, as herein provided —
(1) Decisions of the Collector of Internal Revenue in cases involving disputed assessments, refunds of
internal revenue taxes, fees or other charges, penalties imposed in relation thereto, or other matters
arising under the National Internal Revenue Code or other law or part of law administered by the Bureau
of Internal Revenue;
(2) Decisions of the Commissioner of Customs in cases involving liability for customs duties, fees or other
money charges; seizure, detention or release of property affected; fines; forfeitures or other penalties
imposed in relation thereto; or other matters arising under the Customs Law or other law or part of law
administered by the Bureau of Customs; and
Page 17 of 113
(3) Decisions of provincial or city Boards of Assessment Appeals in cases involving the assessment and
taxation of real property or other matters arising under the Assessment Law, including rules and
regulations relative thereto.
SEC. 9. Fees. — The Court shall fix reasonable fees for the filing of an appeal , for certified document, and
for other authorized services rendered by the Court or its personnel.
SEC. 11. Who may appeal; effect of appeal . — Any person, association or corporation adversely affected
by a decision or ruling of the Collector of Internal Revenue, the Collector of Customs or any provincial or
city Board of Assessment Appeals may file an appeal in the Court of Tax Appeals within thirty days after
the receipt of such decision or ruling.
No appeal taken to the Court of Tax Appeals from the decision of the Collector of Internal Revenue or the
Collector of Customs shall suspend the payment, levy, distraint, and/or sale of any property of the
taxpayer for the satisfaction of his tax liability as provided by existing law; Provided, however, That when
in the opinion of the Court the collection by the Bureau of Internal Revenue or the Commissioner of
Customs may jeopardize the interest of the Government and/or the taxpayer the Court at any stage of
the proceeding may suspend the said collection and require the taxpayer either to deposit the amount
claimed or to file a surety bond for not more than double the amount with the Court. (Emphasis
supplied.)
The foregoing provisions of the law refer and limit only to appeals from decisions or rulings of the
Collector of Internal Revenue, Commissioner of Customs and Provincial or City Boards of Assessment
Appeals in the proper cases. Nowhere does the law expressly vest in the Court of Tax Appeals original
jurisdiction to issue writs of prohibition and injunction independently of, and apart from, an appealed
case. The writ of prohibition or injunction that it may issue under the provisions of section 11, Republic
Act No. 1125, to suspend the collection of taxes, is merely ancillary to and in furtherance of its appellate
jurisdiction in the cases mentioned in section 7 of the Act. The power to issue the writ exists only in cases
appealed to it. This is reflected on the explanatory note of the bill (House No. 175), creating the Court of
Tax Appeals. We quote from the explanatory note:
... It is proposed in the attached bill to establish not merely an administrative body but a regular court
vested with exclusive appellate jurisdiction over cases arising under the National Internal Revenue Code,
Customs Law and the Assessment Law. (Emphasis supplied, p. 2202, Congressional Record, Third
Congress, Vol. I, Part II.)
Congressman Castañeda, one of the proponents of the bill, in his opening remarks sponsoring its
enactment into law, said that "House Bill No. 175 has for its purpose the creation of a regular court of tax
appeals." (p. 2204, supra.) Answering a question from Congressman Alonzo whether the Court of Tax
Appeals would have only appellate jurisdiction and no concurrent or original jurisdiction, the proponent
said that "It has exclusive jurisdiction with reference to matters or cases arising from the Internal
Revenue Code, the Customs Law and the Assessment Law." (pp. 2209-2210, supra). Dwelling further on
the subject, the two members of the House of Representatives — continued their discussion, as follows:
Mr. Alonzo. So that under this proposal you will bring the case immediately to this court that you are
proposing to create, without first having it decided by the Commissioner of Customs or the Collector of
Internal Revenue, as the case may be.
Mr. Castañeda. It will have to be appealed from the decision of the Collector of Internal Revenue, the
Collector of Customs or the Assessors, to the Court of Tax Appeals, then to the Supreme Court. (pp.
2209-2210, supra.)
These statements made during the proceedings indicate that the intention of Congress was to vest the
Court of Tax Appeals with jurisdiction to issue writs of prohibition and injunction only in aid of its
appellate jurisdiction in cases appealed to it and not to clothe it with original jurisdiction to issue them.
Such intent is reflected on the second paragraph of section 11, Republic Act No. 1125 quoted above.
Taxes being the chief source of revenue for the Government to keep it running must be paid immediately
and without delay. A taxpayer who feels aggrieved by the decision or ruling handed down by a revenue
officer and appeals from his decision or ruling to the Court of Tax Appeals must pay the tax assessed,
except that, if in the opinion of the Court the collection would jeopardize the interest of the Government
and/or the taxpayer, it could suspend the collection and require the taxpayer either to deposit the
amount claimed or to file a surety bond for not more than double the amount of the tax assessed.
Page 18 of 113
The judgment under review is annulled and set aside, without pronouncement as to costs.
Facts:
· Algue Inc. is a domestic corp engaged in engineering, construction and other allied activities
· On Jan. 14, 1965, the corp received a letter from the CIR regarding its delinquency income taxes from 1958-
1959, amtg to P83,183.85
· A letter of protest or reconsideration was filed by Algue Inc on Jan 18
· On March 12, a warrant of distraint and levy was presented to Algue Inc. thru its counsel, Atty. Guevara, who
refused to receive it on the ground of the pending protest
· Since the protest was not found on the records, a file copy from the corp was produced and given to BIR
Agent Reyes, who deferred service of the warrant
· On April 7, Atty. Guevara was informed that the BIR was not taking any action on the protest and it was only
then that he accepted the warrant of distraint and levy earlier sought to be served
· On April 23, Algue filed a petition for review of the decision of the CIR with the Court of Tax Appeals
· CIR contentions:
- the claimed deduction of P75,000.00 was properly disallowed because it was not an ordinary reasonable
or necessary business expense
- payments are fictitious because most of the payees are members of the same family in control of Algue
and that there is not enough substantiation of such payments
· CTA: 75K had been legitimately paid by Algue Inc. for actual services rendered in the form of promotional
fees. These were collected by the Payees for their work in the creation of the Vegetable Oil Investment
Corporation of the Philippines and its subsequent purchase of the properties of the Philippine Sugar Estate
Development Company.
Issue: W/N the Collector of Internal Revenue correctly disallowed the P75,000.00 deduction claimed by Algue as
legitimate business expenses in its income tax returns
Ruling:
· Taxes are the lifeblood of the government and so should be collected without unnecessary hindrance, made
in accordance with law.
· RA 1125: the appeal may be made within thirty days after receipt of the decision or ruling challenged
· During the intervening period, the warrant was premature and could therefore not be served.
· Originally, CIR claimed that the 75K promotional fees to be personal holding company income, but later on
conformed to the decision of CTA
· There is no dispute that the payees duly reported their respective shares of the fees in their income tax
returns and paid the corresponding taxes thereon. CTA also found, after examining the evidence, that no
distribution of dividends was involved
· CIR suggests a tax dodge, an attempt to evade a legitimate assessment by involving an imaginary deduction
· Algue Inc. was a family corporation where strict business procedures were not applied and immediate
issuance of receipts was not required. at the end of the year, when the books were to be closed, each payee
made an accounting of all of the fees received by him or her, to make up the total of P75,000.00. This
arrangement was understandable in view of the close relationship among the persons in the family corporation
· The amount of the promotional fees was not excessive. The total commission paid by the Philippine Sugar
Estate Development Co. to Algue Inc. was P125K. After deducting the said fees, Algue still had a balance of
P50,000.00 as clear profit from the transaction. The amount of P75,000.00 was 60% of the total commission.
This was a reasonable proportion, considering that it was the payees who did practically everything, from the
formation of the Vegetable Oil Investment Corporation to the actual purchase by it of the Sugar Estate
properties.
Page 19 of 113
· Sec. 30 of the Tax Code: allowed deductions in the net income – Expenses - All the ordinary and necessary
expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including a reasonable
allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered xxx
· the burden is on the taxpayer to prove the validity of the claimed deduction
· In this case, Algue Inc. has proved that the payment of the fees was necessary and reasonable in the light of
the efforts exerted by the payees in inducing investors and prominent businessmen to venture in an
experimental enterprise and involve themselves in a new business requiring millions of pesos.
· Taxes are what we pay for civilization society. Without taxes, the government would be paralyzed for lack of
the motive power to activate and operate it. Hence, despite the natural reluctance to surrender part of one's
hard earned income to the taxing authorities, every person who is able to must contribute his share in the
running of the government. The government for its part, is expected to respond in the form of tangible and
intangible benefits intended to improve the lives of the people and enhance their moral and material values
· Taxation must be exercised reasonably and in accordance with the prescribed procedure. If it is not, then the
taxpayer has a right to complain and the courts will then come to his succor
Algue Inc.’s appeal from the decision of the CIR was filed on time with the CTA in accordance with Rep. Act
No. 1125. And we also find that the claimed deduction by Algue Inc. was permitted under the Internal
Revenue Code and should therefore not have been disallowed by the CIR
Issue: Whether or not assessment of taxes can be enforced even if there is a case contesting it.
Held: The argument that the assessment cannot as yet be enforced because it is still being
contested loses sight of the urgency of the need to collect taxes as "the lifeblood of the
government." If the payment of taxes could be postponed by simply questioning their validity,
the machinery of the state would grind to a halt and all government functions would be
paralyzed. That is the reason why, save for the exception in RA 1125 , the Tax Code provides
that injunction is not available to restrain collection of tax. Thereby, we hold that the respondent
Court of Tax Appeals erred in its order.
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Issue
Whether or not the PNB funds may be levied in the expropriation proceeding ?
Held
The petitioner belatedly informed the court that there are two existing accounts with PNB.
Account A was the one intended for the expropriation proceeding and account B is primarily
intended for financing governmental functions and activities. Because account A has a fund that
is insufficient to meet the remaining amount of its balance for the expropriation proceeding, it is
unlawful to get the remaining balance from Account B without an ordinance appropriating said
funds for expropriation purpose. Thus the court ruled that account A maybe levied but not
account B. The respondents are without recourse however should the petitioner refuse to pay its
remaining obligation. Where a municipality refuses without justifiable reason to effect payment of
a final money judgment rendered against it, the claimant may avail the remedy of mandamus in
order to compel the enactment and approval of the necessary appropriation ordinance and the
corresponding disbursement of municipal funds for such purpose.
FACTS: The petitioner, a government-owned and controlled corporation, sells electric power to
the residents of Cabanatuan City, posting a gross income of P107,814,187.96 in 1992.
Accordingly, pursuant to Section 37 of Ordinance No. 165-92, the respondent assessed the
petitioner of franchise tax amounting to P808,606.41, representing 75% of 1% of the latter’s
gross receipts for the preceding year. The petitioner refused to pay the tax assessment arguing
that the respondent has no authority to impose tax on government entities. It also contended
that as a non-profit organization, it is exempted from the payment of all forms of taxes, charges,
duties or fees in accordance with Sec. 13 of RA No. 6395, as amended. Consequently, the
respondent filed a collection suit in the RTC, demanding that the petitioner pay the assessed tax
due plus surcharge. The respondent alleged that the petitioner’s exemption from local taxes has
been repealed by Section 193 of the LGC, which reads as follows: Sec. 193. Withdrawal of Tax
Exemption Privileges.- Unless otherwise provided in this Code, tax exemptions or incentives
granted to, or presently enjoyed by all persons, whether natural or juridical, including
government owned or controlled corporations, except local water districts, cooperatives duly
registered under R.A. No. 6938, non-stock and non-profit hospitals and educational institutions,
are hereby withdrawn upon the effectivity of this Code.
ISSUE: Whether the petitioner is exempted from payment of local taxes. (NO)
RULING: As a rule, tax exemptions are construed strongly against the claimant. Exemptions must
be shown to exist clearly and categorically, and supported by clear legal provisions. In the case
at bar, the petitioner's sole refuge is Section 13 of RA No. 6395 exempting itself from, among
others, all income taxes, franchise taxes and realty taxes to be paid to the National Government,
its provinces, cities, municipalities and other government agencies and instrumentalities. It must
be noted, however, that Section 193 of the LGC withdrew, subject to limited exceptions, the
sweeping tax privileges previously enjoyed by private and public corporations. Contrary to the
contention of petitioner, Section 193 of the LGC is an express, albeit general, repeal of all
statutes granting tax exemptions from local taxes. Not being a local water district, a cooperative
registered under RA No. 6938, or a non-stock and non-profit hospital or educational institution,
petitioner clearly does not belong to the exception. It is therefore incumbent upon the petitioner
to point to some provisions of the LGC that expressly grant it exemption from local taxes. This,
however, would be an exercise in futility. Section 137 of the LGC clearly states that the LGUs can
Page 21 of 113
impose franchise tax notwithstanding any exemption granted by any law or other special law.
The said provision does not admit any exception. It is worth mentioning that Section 192 of the
LGC empowers the LGUs, through ordinances duly approved, to grant tax exemptions, initiatives
or reliefs. In enacting Section 37 of Ordinance No. 165-92 which imposes an annual franchise tax
notwithstanding any exemption granted by law or other special law, the respondent clearly did
not intend to exempt the petitioner from the coverage thereof. Doubtless, the power to tax is the
most effective instrument to raise needed revenues to finance and support myriad activities of
the local government units for the delivery of basic services essential to the promotion of the
general welfare and the enhancement of peace, progress, and prosperity of the people. The
original reason for the withdrawal of tax exemption privileges granted to government owned or
controlled corporations and all other units of government was that such privilege resulted in
serious tax base erosion and distortions in the tax treatment of similarly situated enterprises.
The primary reason, however, that militates against the granting of the motion
to withdraw is the fact that the CTA Division, in its August 10, 2011 Decision,
had already determined that Nippon was only entitled to refund the reduced
amount of P2,614,296.84 since it failed to prove that the recipients of its
services were non-residents "doing business outside the Philippines"; hence,
Nippon's purported sales therefrom could not qualify as zero-rated sales,
necessitating the reduction in the amount of refund claimed. Markedly different
from this is the BIR's determination that Nippon should
receive P21,675,128.91 as per the July 27, 2011 Tax Credit Certificate, which
is, in all, P19,060,832.07 larger than the amount found due by the CTA
Division. Therefore, as aptly pointed out by Associate Justice Teresita J.
Leonardo-De Castro during the deliberations on this case, the massive
discrepancy alone between the administrative and judicial determinations of the
amount to be refunded to Nippon should have already raised a red flag to the
CTA Division. Clearly, the interest of the government, and, more significantly,
the public, will be greatly prejudiced by the erroneous grant of refund - at a
substantial amount at that - in favor of Nippon. Hence, under these
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circumstances, the CTA Division should not have granted the motion to
withdraw.
In this relation, it deserves mentioning that the CIR is not estopped from
assailing the validity of the July 27, 2011 Tax Credit Certificate which was issued
by her subordinates in the BIR. In matters of taxation, the government cannot
be estopped by the mistakes, errors or omissions of its agents for upon it
depends the ability of the government to serve the people for whose benefit
taxes are collected.40
Issue/s:
1. Whether or not the provisions of Act No. 3606 (Tax Law) which is favorable to the taxpayer be
given retroactive effect?
Held and Reasoning: No. The respondent levied and assessed the inheritance tax collected from
the petitioner under the provisions of section 1544 of the Revised Administrative Code as
amended by Act No. 3606. However, the latter only enacted in 1930 – not the law in force when
the testator died in 1922. Laws cannot be applied retroactively. The Court states that it is a well-
settled principle that inheritance taxation is governed by the statue in force at the time of the
death of the decendent. The Court also emphasized that “a statute should be considered as
prospective in its operation, unless the language of the statute clearly demands or expresses that
it shall have retroactive effect…” Act No. 3606 does not contain any provisions indicating a
legislative intent to give it a retroactive effect. Therefore, the provisions of Act No. 3606 cannot
be applied to the case at bar.
FACTS: Petitioner was assessed deficiency income, value-added and withholding tax for the
taxable year 1996. In the assessment, petitioner’s claim for business deduction on purchases of
raw materials was disallowed on the ground that petitioner failed to support sales invoices which
are compliant with Section 238 of the 1977 Tax Code, particularly in the name of the purchaser
and the date of the transaction. The CTA found that the alterations in the sales invoices gave rise
to serious doubts as to their authenticity. Petitioner argues that Section 29 of the 1977 Tax Code
is applicable to determine the deductibility of an expense, particularly, (1) the expense must be
ordinary and necessary; (2) it must be paid or incurred within the taxable year; and (3) it must
be paid or incurred in carrying on a trade or business. Petitioner argues that, prior to the
promulgation of the 1997 Tax Code; the law does not require the production of official receipts to
prove an expense.
ISSUE: Whether or not the requirements on the information reflected in the receipts and
invoices, is applicable to determine business deductibility of expenses? Yes but unsubstantiated
RULING: It is, thus, clear that Section 29 of the 1977 NIRC does not exempt the
taxpayer from substantiating claims for deductions. While official receipts are not
the only pieces of evidence which can prove deductible expenses, if presented,
they shall be subjected to examination. PMFC submitted official receipts as
among its evidence, and the CTA doubted their veracity. PMFC was, however,
unable to persuasively explain and prove through other documents the
discrepancies in the said receipts. Consequently, the CTA disallowed the
deductions claimed, and in its ruling, invoked S
Further, revenue laws are not intended to be liberally construed. Taxes are the
lifeblood of the government and in Holmes' memorable metaphor, the price we
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pay for civilization; hence, laws relative thereto must be faithfully and strictly
implemented.35 While the 1977 NIRC required substantiation requirements for
claimed deductions to be allowed, PMFC insists on leniency, which is not
warranted under the circumstances.
Respondent filed with the BIR taxes for 2001. Respondent, through Sarmiento, their director
of Finance, executed several waivers of the statute of limitations to extend the prescriptive
perios of assessment for taxes. On 2005, respondent received from the BIR a PAN and a
formal letter of demand to pay deficiency income tax. The BIR denied respondent's protest.
With the CTA, it was held that the demand was beyond the three year prescription period
under the NIRC. That the case does not apply the 10 year prescripton period as there was not
false return by the respondent. Also, the waivers did not validly extend the prescription
because of irregularities.
RULING: NO. The SC held that a waiver of the statute of limitations must faithfully comply
with RMO No. 20-90 and RDAO 05-01 in order to be valid. Sarmiento failed to show her
authority to the BIR to sign the waivers. The BIR were also at fault having to neglect their
ministerial duties. Both parties knew the infirmities of the waivers but still continued.
Respondents were held in bad faith as after having benefited by the waivers by giving them
more time to pay, they used the waivers they made themselves when the consequences were
not in their favor. The BIR's negligence amounts to malice and bad faith as they also knew
the waivers did not conform with RMO 20-90 and RDAO 05-01. As both parties are in bad
faith, the SC granted the petition on the issue of the nullification of the formal letter of
demand to the CTA.
ISSUE
Whether respondent DEPI’s judicial claim was filed within the prescriptive period under Sec. 112
of the Tax Code.
HELD: NO.The two-year period inSec. 112 refers only to administrative claims. Sections 204 and
229 of the NIRC pertain to the refund of erroneously or illegally collected taxes.Input VAT is not
‘excessively’ collected as understood under Section 229 because at the time the input VAT is
collected the amount paid is correct and proper. Hence, respondent cannot advance its position
by referring to Section 229 because Section 112 is the more specific and appropriate provision of
law for claims for excess input VAT.Petitioner is entirely correct in its assertion that compliance
with the periods provided for in the abovequoted provision is indeed mandatory and
jurisdictional, as affirmed in this Court’s ruling in San Roque, where the CourtEn Banc settled the
controversy surrounding the application of the 120+30-day period provided for in Section 112 of
the NIRC and reiterated the Aichi doctrine that the 120+30-day period is mandatory and
jurisdictional.
Therefore, in accordance with San Roque, respondent’s judicial claim for refund must be denied
for having been filed late. Although respondent filed its administrative claim with the BIR on
August 9, 2004 before the expiration of the two-year period in Section l 12(A), it undoubtedly
failed to comply with the 120+ 30-day period in Section l l 2(D) (now subparagraph C) which
requires that upon the inaction of the CIR for 120 days after the submission of the documents in
support of the claim, the taxpayer has to file its judicial claim within 30 days after the lapse of
the said period. The 120 days granted to the CIR to decide the case ended on December 7,
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2004. Thus, DEPI had 30 days therefrom, or until January 6, 2005, to file a petition for review
with the CTA. Unfortunately, DEPI only sought judicial relief on May 5, 2005 when it belatedly
filed its petition to the CTA, despite having had ample time to file the same, almost four months
after the period allowed by law. As a consequence of DEPI’s late filing, the CTA did not properly
acquire jurisdiction over the claim.
The Court has held time and again that taxes are the lifeblood of the government and,
consequently, tax laws must be faithfully and strictly implemented as they are not intended to be
liberally construed.24 Hence, We are left with no other recourse but to deny respondent's judicial
claim for refund for non-compliance with the provisions of Section 112 of the NIRC.
Petitioner questioned the assessments for lack of legal basis due to the City Assessor's failure to
identify the specific properties and its corresponding assessed values. The City Assessor replied
that the subject ARPs (with an additional ARP on another building bringing the total number of
ARPs to thirty-seven [37]) against the buildings of petitioner located within the JHSEZ were
issued on the basis of the approved building permits obtained from the City Engineer's Office of
Baguio City and pursuant to Sections 201 to 206 of RA No. 7160 or the LGC of 1991.
Petitioner filed with the Board of Tax Assessment Appeals (BTAA) of Baguio City an appeal under
Section 226 2 of the LGC of 1991 challenging the validity and propriety of the issuances of the
City Assessor. Petitioner claimed that there was no legal basis for the issuance of the
assessments because it was allegedly exempted from paying taxes, national and local, including
real property taxes, pursuant to RA No. 7227, otherwise known as the Bases Conversion and
Development Act of 1992.
With the above-enumerated reasons, it is obvious that in order for a complete determination of
petitioner's alleged exemption from payment of real property tax under RA No. 7160 or the LGC
of 1991, there are factual issues needed to be confirmed. Hence, being a question of fact,
petitioner cannot do without first resorting to the proper administrative remedies, or as
previously discussed, by paying under protest the tax assessed in compliance with Section 252
thereof.
Accordingly, the CBAA and the CTA En Banc correctly ruled that real property taxes should first
be paid before any protest thereon may be considered. It is without a doubt that such
requirement of "payment under protest" is a condition sine qua non before an appeal may be
entertained. Thus, remanding the case to the LBAA for further proceedings subject to a full and
up-to-date payment, either in cash or surety, of realty tax on the subject properties was proper.
To reiterate, the restriction upon the power of courts to impeach tax assessment without a prior
payment, under protest, of the taxes assessed is consistent with the doctrine that taxes are the
lifeblood of the nation and as such their collection cannot be curtailed by injunction or any like
action; otherwise, the state or, in this case, the local government unit, shall be crippled in
dispensing the needed services to the people, and its machinery gravely disabled.
The right of local government units to collect taxes due must always be upheld to avoid severe
erosion. This consideration is consistent with the State policy to guarantee the autonomy of local
governments and the objective of RA No. 7160 or the LGC of 1991 that they enjoy genuine and
meaningful local autonomy to empower them to achieve their fullest development as self-reliant
communities and make them effective partners in the attainment of national goals.
All told, We go back to what was at the outset stated, that is, that a claim for tax exemption,
whether full or partial, does not question the authority of local assessor to assess real property
tax, but merely raises a question of the reasonableness or correctness of such assessment, which
Page 25 of 113
requires compliance with Section 252 of the LGC of 1991. Such argument which may involve a
question of fact should be resolved at the first instance by the LBAA.
The CTA En Banc was correct in dismissing the petition in C.T.A. EB No. 48, and affirming the
CBAA's position that it cannot delve on the issue of petitioner's alleged non-taxability on the
ground of exemption since the LBAA has not decided the case on the merits. This is in
compliance with the procedural steps prescribed in the law.
First Lepanto Taisho Insurance Corporation (“petitioner”) is a Large Taxpayer under Revenue
Regulations No. 6-85, as amended. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“respondent”) sent a
Letter of Authority to petitioner to examine their books of account for the year 1997 and other
unverified years. On December 29, 1999, the respondent issued tax assessments for deficiency
income, withholding, expanded withholding, final withholding, value-added, and documentary
taxes for the year 1997. The petitioner protested such assessment, which it partially withdrew in
view of the tax amnesty program it had availed. The CTA ordered the petitioner to pay P
1,994,390.86 as deficiency withholding tax on compensation, expanded withholding tax, and final
tax. The petitioner appealed to the CTA En Banc which affirmed the decision of the CTA Division.
The CTA rejected the contention of the petitioner that it is not liable to pay withholding tax on
compensation to some of its directors since they were not employees and they had already been
subjected to expanded withholding tax. As to the petitioner’s transportation, subsistence and
lodging, and representation allowance, the CTA En Banc ruled that the petitioner failed to prove
that those were actual expenses. As to deficiency expanded withholding taxes on compensation,
petitioner failed to substantiate that the commissions earned came from reinsurance activities
and should not be subject to withholding tax. As to deficiency final withholding taxes, petitioner
failed to present proof of remittance to establish that it had remitted the final tax on dividends
paid as well as the payments for services rendered by a Malaysian company. As to the imposition
of delinquency interest, records reveal that petitioner failed to pay the deficiency taxes within
thirty (30) days from receipt of the demand letter, thus, delinquency interest accrued from such
non-payment.
Issue
Ruling
Page 26 of 113
service/contractor and purchases, the petitioner was not able to sufficiently establish that the
transportation expenses reflected in their books were reimbursement from actual transportation
expenses incurred by its employees in connection with their duties as the only document
presented was a Schedule of Transportation Expenses without pertinent supporting documents.
Without said documents, such as but not limited to, receipts, transportation-related vouchers
and/or invoices, there is no way of ascertaining whether the amounts reflected in the schedule of
expenses were disbursed for transportation.
With regard to commission expense, no additional documentary evidence, like the reinsurance
agreements contracts, was presented to support petitioner’s allegation that the expenditure
originated from reinsurance activities that gave rise to reinsurance commissions, not subject to
withholding tax. As to occupancy costs, records reveal that petitioner failed to compute the
correct total occupancy cost that should be subjected to withholding tax, hence, petitioner is
liable for the deficiency.
As to service/contractors and purchases, petitioner contends that both parties already stipulated
that it correctly withheld the taxes due. Stipulations cannot defeat the right of the State to collect
the correct taxes due on an individual or juridical person because taxes are the lifeblood of our
nation so its collection should be actively pursued without unnecessary impediment.
III.Deficiency final withholding taxes on payment of dividends and computerization expenses to
foreign entities
As to the deficiency final withholding tax assessments for payments of dividends and
computerization expenses incurred by petitioner to foreign entities, particularly Matsui Marine &
Fire Insurance Co. Ltd. (Matsui), the Court agrees with CIR that petitioner failed to present
evidence to show the supposed remittance to Matsui.
IV.Delinquency interest under Section 249 (c) (3) of the NIRC
The Court likewise holds the imposition of delinquency interest under Section 249 (c) (3) of the
1997 NIRC to be proper, because failure to pay the deficiency tax assessed within the time
prescribed for its payment justifies the imposition of interest at the rate of twenty percent (20%)
per annum, which interest shall be assessed and collected from the date prescribed for its
payment until full payment is made.
It is worthy to note that tax revenue statutes are not generally intended to be liberally construed.
Moreover, the CTA being a highly specialized court .particularly created for the purpose of
reviewing tax and customs cases, it is settled that its findings and conclusions are accorded great
respect and are generally upheld by this Court, unless there is a clear showing of a reversible
error or an improvident exercise of authority. Absent such errors, the challenged decision should
be maintained.
Issue :
Whether or not the right of the BIR to collect from BPI the alleged deficiency on documentary
stamp tax had prescribed?
Held:
The Supreme Court ruled that the action for collection had already prescribed. The period to
collect the deficiency is limited to 3 years as provided by Section 203 of the Tax Code.
The statute of limitation on collection may be interrupted or suspended by a valid waiver
executed in accordance with paragraph (d) of Sections 223 and 224 of the Tax Code as
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amended. The purpose of the limitation is to protect the taxpayer form the prolonged and
unreasonable assessment and investigation by the BIR.
- CIR v Pineda
ISSUE: Does the statute of non-claims of the Rules of Court bar the claim of the government for
unpaid taxes?
HELD: No. Section 5, Rule 86 of the Rules of Curt makes no mention of claims for monetary
obligation of the decedent created by law, such as taxes which is entirely of different character
from the claims enumerated, such as “all claims for money against the decedent arising from
contract, express or implied, whether the same be due, or contingent, all claim for funeral
expenses and expenses for the last sickness of the decedent and judgment for money against the
decedent.” Under the familiar rule of statutory construction, the mention of one thing implies the
exclusion of another thing not mentioned. As already shown, taxes may be collected even after
the distribution of the estate of the decedent among his heirs (Government of the Philippines vs.
Pamintuan, supra; Pineda vs. CFI of Tayabas, supra Clara Diluangco Palanca vs. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, G. R. No. L-16661, January 31, 1962).
Furthermore, as held in Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Pineda, supra, citing the last
paragraph of Section 315 of the Tax Code payment of income tax shall be a lien in favor of the
Government of the Philippines from the time the assessment was made by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue until paid with interests, penalties, etc. By virtue of such lien, this court held
that the property of the estate already in the hands of an heir or transferee may be subject to
the payment of the tax due the estate. A fortiori before the inheritance has passed to the heirs,
the unpaid taxes due the decedent may be collected, even without its having been presented
under Section 2 of Rule 86 of the Rules of Court. It may truly be said that until the property of
the estate of the decedent has vested in the heirs, the decedent, represented by his estate,
continues as if he were still alive, subject to the payment of such taxes as would be collectible
from the estate even after his death.
FACTS: It appears that in a letter dated August 26, 1986, herein private respondent corporation
filed a claim for refund with the BIR in the amount of P19,971,745.00 representing the alleged
aggregate of the excess of its carried-over total quarterly payments over the actual income tax
due, plus carried-over withholding tax payments on government securities and rental income, as
computed in its final income tax return for the calendar year ending December 31, 1985. Two
days later, or on August 28, 1986, in order to interrupt the running of the prescriptive period,
Citytrust filed a petition with the Court of Tax Appeals claiming the refund of its income tax
overpayments for the years 1983, 1984 and 1985 in the total amount of P19,971,745.00. In the
answer filed, it was asserted that the mere averment that Citytrust incurred a net loss in 1985
does not ipso facto merit a refund; that the amounts of P6,611,223.00, P1,959,514.00 and
Page 28 of 113
P28,238.00 claimed by Citytrust as 1983 income tax overpayment, taxes withheld on proceeds of
government securities investments, as well as on rental income, respectively, are not properly
documented; that assuming arguendo that petitioner is entitled to refund, the right to claim the
same has prescribed with respect to income tax payments prior to August 28, 1984, pursuant to
Sections 292 and 295 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, as amended, since the
petition was filed only on August 28, 1986. Thereafter, said court rendered its decision in the
case, the decretal portion of which declares that in view of the foregoing, petitioner is entitled to
a refund but only for the overpaid taxes incurred in 1984 and 1985. The refundable amount as
shown in its 1983 income tax return is hereby denied on the ground of prescription. Respondent
is hereby ordered to grant a refund to petitioner Citytrust Banking Corp. in the amount of P13,
314,506.14 representing the overpaid income taxes for 1984 and 1985. A motion for the
reconsideration of said decision was initially filed by the Solicitor General on the sole ground that
the statements and certificates of taxes allegedly withheld are not conclusive evidence of actual
payment and remittance of the taxes withheld to the BIR. A supplemental motion for
reconsideration was thereafter filed, wherein it was contended for the first time that herein
private respondent had outstanding unpaid deficiency income taxes. Oppositions to both the
basic and supplemental motions for reconsideration were filed by private respondent Citytrust.
Thereafter, the Court of Tax Appeals issued a resolution denying both motions for the reason
that Section 52 (b) of the Tax Code, as implemented by Revenue Regulation 6-85, only requires
that the claim for tax credit or refund must show that the income received was declared as part
of the gross income, and that the fact of withholding was duly established. Moreover, with regard
to the argument raised in the supplemental motion for reconsideration anent the deficiency tax
assessment against herein petitioner, the tax court ruled that since that matter was not raised in
the pleadings, the same cannot be considered, invoking therefor the salutary purpose of the
omnibus motion rule which is to obviate multiplicity of motions and to discourage dilatory
pleadings. A petition for review was filed by herein petitioner with respondent Court of Appeals
which in due course promulgated its decision affirming the judgment of the Court of Tax Appeals.
Petitioner eventually elevated the case to this Court, maintaining that said respondent court erred
in affirming the grant of the claim for refund of Citytrust, considering that, firstly, said private
respondent failed to prove and substantiate its claim for such refund; and, secondly, the bureau's
findings of deficiency income and business tax liabilities against private respondent for the year
1984 bars such payment.
RULING: After a careful review of the records, we find that under the peculiar circumstances of
this case, the ends of substantial justice and public interest would be better subserved by the
remand of this case to the Court of Tax Appeals for further proceedings. It is the sense of this
Court that the BIR, represented herein by petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue, was
denied its day in court by reason of the mistakes and/or negligence of its officials and employees.
It can readily be gleaned from the records that when it was herein petitioner's turn to present
evidence, several postponements were sought by its counsel, the Solicitor General, due to the
unavailability of the necessary records which were not transmitted by the Refund Audit Division
of the BIR to said counsel, as well as the investigation report made by the Banks/Financing and
Insurance Division of the said bureau/ despite repeated requests. It was under such a
predicament and in deference to the tax court that ultimately, said records being still unavailable;
herein petitioner's counsel was constrained to submit the case for decision on February 20, 1991
without presenting any evidence. For that matter, the BIR officials and/or employees concerned
also failed to heed the order of the Court of Tax Appeals to remand the records to it pursuant to
Section 2, Rule 7 of the Rules of the Court of Tax Appeals which provides that the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue and the Commissioner of Customs shall certify and forward to the Court of
Tax Appeals, within ten days after filing his answer, all the records of the case in his possession,
with the pages duly numbered, and if the records are in separate folders, then the folders shall
also be numbered. The aforestated impassé came about due to the fact that, despite the filing of
the aforementioned initiatory petition in CTA Case No. 4099 with the Court of Tax Appeals, the
Tax Refund Division ofthe BIR still continued to act administratively on the claim for refund
previously filed therein, instead of forwarding the records of the case to the Court of Tax Appeals
as ordered. It is a long and firmly settled rule of law that the Government is not bound by the
errors committed by its agents. In the performance of its governmental functions, the State
cannot be estopped by the neglect of its agent and officers. Although the Government may
generally be estopped through the affirmative acts of public officers acting within their authority,
their neglect or omission of public duties as exemplified in this case will not and should not
produce that effect. Nowhere is the aforestated rule more true than in the field of taxation. It is
axiomatic that the Government cannot and must not be estopped particularly in matters involving
taxes. Taxes are the lifeblood of the nation through which the government agencies continue to
Page 29 of 113
operate and with which the State effects its functions for the welfare of its constituents. The
errors of certain administrative officers should never be allowed to jeopardize the Government's
financial position,22 especially in the case at bar where the amount involves millions of pesos the
collection whereof, if justified, stands to be prejudiced just because of bureaucratic lethargy.
Further, it is also worth noting that the Court of Tax Appeals erred in denying petitioner's
supplemental motion for reconsideration alleging bringing to said court's attention the existence
of the deficiency income and business tax assessment against Citytrust. The fact of such
deficiency assessment is intimately related to and inextricably intertwined with the right of
respondent bank to claim for a tax refund for the same year. To award such refund despite the
existence of that deficiency assessment is an absurdity and a polarity in conceptual effects.
Herein private respondent cannot be entitled to refund and at the same time be liable for a tax
deficiency assessment for the same year. The grant of a refund is founded on the assumption
that the tax return is valid, that is, the facts stated therein are true and correct. The deficiency
assessment, although not yet final, created a doubt as to and constitutes a challenge against the
truth and accuracy of the facts stated in said return which, by itself and without unquestionable
evidence, cannot be the basis for the grant of the refund. Moreover, to grant the refund without
determination of the proper assessment and the tax due would inevitably result in multiplicity of
proceedings or suits. If the deficiency assessment should subsequently be upheld, the
Government will be forced to institute anew a proceeding for the recovery of erroneously
refunded taxes which recourse must be filed within the prescriptive period of ten years after
discovery of the falsity, fraud or omission in the false or fraudulent return involved.23 This would
necessarily require and entail additional efforts and expenses on the part of the Government
impose a burden on and a drain of government funds, and impedes or delays the collection of
much-needed revenue for governmental operations. Thus, to avoid multiplicity of suits and
unnecessary difficulties or expenses, it is both logically necessary and legally appropriate that the
issue of the deficiency tax assessment against Citytrust be resolved jointly with its claim for tax
refund, to determine once and for all in a single proceeding the true and correct amount of tax
due or refundable. In fact, as the Court of Tax Appeals itself has heretofore conceded, it would
be only just and fair that the taxpayer and the Government alike be given equal opportunities to
avail of remedies under the law to defeat each other's claim and to determine all matters of
dispute between them in one single case. It is important to note that in determining whether or
not petitioner is entitled to the refund of the amount paid, it would necessary to determine how
much the Government is entitled to collect as taxes. This would necessarily include the
determination of the correct liability of the taxpayer and, certainly, a determination of this case
would constitute res judicata on both parties as to all the matters subject thereof or necessarily
involved therein.
Issue: Whether or not income of YMCA from lease and fee are exempt from tax?
Decision: The income is not exempt from tax. Under NIRC, the income received by civic league or
clubs not organized for profit are exempt from tax in respect to income received by them. The
exemption does not apply to income derived from any of their properties or any activities
conducted for profit regardless of the disposition made of such income. Because taxes are the
lifeblood of the nation, stict interpretation in construing tax exemptions should be applied.
Exemption “must be granted in a statute stated in a language too clear to be mistaken.”
Page 30 of 113
Selling companies paid and passed the specific taxes imposed under Sec. 153 and 156 of the
1997 NIRC to petitioner as purchaser who in turn filed before CIR a Claim for Refund for P120,
825 representing 25% of the specific taxes actually paid based on Insular Lumber Co. v. CTA and
Sec. 5 of RA 1435 and complied with its procedure.
Then, petitioner filed before CA a Petition for Review: Favored petitioner to a partial refund
P2,923 (excluding those that have prescribed) and based on the rates deemed paid under RA
1435 (NOT higher rates actually paid under the NIRC)
Insisting that the basis be the higher rate, petitioner elevated the case to the CTA who affirmed
the CA's decision
ISSUE: W/N the basis should be the higher rates prescribed by Sec. 153 and 156 of the 1997
NIRC
HELD: NO. A tax cannot be imposed unless it is supported by the clear and express language of
a statute; On the other hand, once the tax is unquestionably imposed, a claim of exemption from
tax payments must be clearly shown and based on language in the law too plain to be mistaken.
Section 5, RA 1435 as a tax exemption, must be construed strictissimi juris against the grantee.
Supported by CIR v. CA and Atlas Co., CIR v. Rio Tuba Nickel Mining Corp. and Insular Lumber
Co. - all cases where purchases was made BEFORE 1997 NIRC is in effect.
According to an eminent authority on taxation, there is no tax exemption solely on the ground of
equity
Issue:
Whether or not the contentions of Bongbong Marcos are correct
Ruling:
No. The deficiency income tax assessments and estate tax assessment are already final and
unappealable -and-the subsequent levy of real properties is a tax remedy resorted to by the
government, sanctioned by Section 213 and 218 of the National Internal Revenue Code. This
summary tax remedy is distinct and separate from the other tax remedies (such as Judicial Civil
actions and Criminal actions), and is not affected or precluded by the pendency of any other tax
remedies instituted by the government.
The approval of the court, sitting in probate, or as a settlement tribunal over the deceased's
estate is not a mandatory requirement in the collection of estate taxes. On the contrary, under
Section 87 of the NIRC, it is the probate or settlement court which is bidden not to authorize the
executor or judicial administrator of the decedent's estate to deliver any distributive share to any
party interested in the estate, unless it is shown a Certification by the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue that the estate taxes have been paid. This provision disproves the petitioner's
contention that it is the probate court which approves the assessment and collection of the estate
tax.
On the issue of prescription, the omission to file an estate tax return, and the subsequent failure
to contest or appeal the assessment made by the BIR is fatal to the petitioner's cause, as under
Sec.223 of the NIRC, in case of failure to file a return, the tax may be assessed at anytime within
10 years after the omission, and any tax so assessed may be collected by levy upon real property
within 3 years (now 5 years) following the assessment of the tax. Since the estate tax
assessment had become final and unappealable by the petitioner's default as regards protesting
the validity of the said assessment, there is no reason why the BIR cannot continue with the
collection of the said tax.
Page 31 of 113
FACTS: Petitioners JBL Reyes et al. owned a parcel of land in Tondo which are leased and
occupied as dwelling units by tenants who were paying monthly rentals of not exceeding P300.
Sometimes in 1971 the Rental Freezing Law was passed prohibiting for one year from its
effectivity, an increase in monthly rentals of dwelling units where rentals do not exceed three
hundred pesos (P300.00), so that the Reyeses were precluded from raising the rents and from
ejecting the tenants. In 1973, respondent City Assessor of Manila re-classified and reassessed the
value of the subject properties based on the schedule of market values, which entailed an
increase in the corresponding tax rates prompting petitioners to file a Memorandum of
Disagreement averring that the reassessments made were "excessive, unwarranted, inequitable,
confiscatory and unconstitutional" considering that the taxes imposed upon them greatly
exceeded the annual income derived from their properties. They argued that the income
approach should have been used in determining the land values instead of the comparable sales
approach which the City Assessor adopted.
ISSUE: Is the approach on tax assessment used by the City Assessor reasonable?
HELD: No. The taxing power has the authority to make a reasonable and natural classification for
purposes of taxation but the government's act must not be prompted by a spirit of hostility, or at
the very least discrimination that finds no support in reason. It suffices then that the laws
operate equally and uniformly on all persons under similar circumstances or that all persons must
be treated in the same manner, the conditions not being different both in the privileges conferred
and the liabilities imposed.
Consequently, it stands to reason that petitioners who are burdened by the government by its
Rental Freezing Laws (then R.A. No. 6359 and P.D. 20) under the principle of social justice
should not now be penalized by the same government by the imposition of excessive taxes
petitioners can ill afford and eventually result in the forfeiture of their properties.
ISSUE: Is the contention of the petitioner correct? Is the revenue circular a valid exemption to
the NIRC?
HELD: No. The relaxation of revenue regulations by RMC 7-85 is not warranted as it disregards
the two-year prescriptive period set by law. Basic is the principle that "taxes are the lifeblood of
the nation." The primary purpose is to generate funds for the State to finance the needs of the
citizenry and to advance the common weal. Due process of law under the Constitution does not
require judicial proceedings in tax cases. This must necessarily be so because it is upon taxation
that the government chiefly relies to obtain the means to carry on its operations and it is of
utmost importance that the modes adopted to enforce the collection of taxes levied should be
summary and interfered with as little as possible. From the same perspective, claims for refund
or tax credit should be exercised within the time fixed by law because the BIR being an
administrative body enforced to collect taxes, its functions should not be unduly delayed or
hampered by incidental matters.
Page 32 of 113
ISSUE: Can there be an off-setting between the tax liabilities vis-a-vis claims of tax refund of the
petitioner?
HELD: No. Philex's claim is an outright disregard of the basic principle in tax law that taxes are
the lifeblood of the government and so should be collected without unnecessary hindrance.
Evidently, to countenance Philex's whimsical reason would render ineffective our tax collection
system. Too simplistic, it finds no support in law or in jurisprudence. To be sure, Philex cannot be
allowed to refuse the payment of its tax liabilities on the ground that it has a pending tax claim
for refund or credit against the government which has not yet been granted.Taxes cannot b
subject to compensation for the simple reason that the government and the taxpayer are not
creditors and debtors of each other. There is a material distinction between a tax and debt.
Debts are due to the Government
in its corporate capacity, while taxes are due to the Government in its sovereign capacity. xxx
There can be no off-setting of taxes against the claims that the taxpayer may have against the
government. person cannot refuse to pay a tax on the ground that the government owes him an
amount equal to or greater than the tax being collected. The collection of a tax cannot await the
results of a lawsuit against the government.
HELD: No. This contention is untenable. We cannot countenance that theory that would make
the
commencement of the statutory 30-day period solely dependent on the will of the taxpayer and
place the latter in a position to put off indefinitely and at his convenience the finality of a tax
assessment. Such an absurd procedure would be detrimental to the interest of the Government,
for "taxes are the lifeblood of the government, and their prompt and certain availability is an
imperious need."
FACTS: Congress enacted the EPIRA on June 8, 2001; on June 26, 2001, it took effect. On April
5, 2002, respondent National Power Corporation-Strategic Power Utilities Group (NPC-SPUG) filed
with respondent ERC a petition for the availment from the Universal Charge of its share for
Missionary Electrification.NPC filed another petition with ERC, praying that the proposed share
from the Universal Charge for the Environmental charge of ₱0.0025 per kilowatt-hour, or a total
of ₱119,488,847.59, be approved for withdrawal from the Special Trust Fund (STF) managed by
respondent Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Group (PSALM) for the rehabilitation
and management of watershed areas. ERC issued an Order provisionally approving the computed
amount of ₱0.0168/kWh as the share of the NPC-SPUG from the Universal Charge for Missionary
Electrification and authorizing the National Transmission Corporation (TRANSCO) and Distribution
Page 33 of 113
Utilities to collect the same from its endusers on a monthly basis. ERC rendered another Decision
modifying its Order of December 20, 2002.. Relative thereto, TRANSCO and Dus are directed to
collect the UC-ME in the amount of ₱0.0373 per kilowatt-hour and remit the same to PSALM on
or before the 15th day of the succeeding month. In the meantime, NPC-SPUG is directed to
submit, a detailed report to include Audited Financial Statements and physical status of the
projects using the prescribed format. NPC-SPUG filed a Motion for Reconsideration asking the
ERC, among others, to set aside the abovementioned Decision, which the ERC granted.
Meanwhile, ERC decided ERC Case No. 2002-194, authorizing the NPC to draw up to
₱70,000,000.00 from PSALM for its 2003 Watershed Rehabilitation Budget subject to the
availability of funds for the Environmental Fund component of the Universal Charge. On the basis
of the said ERC decisions, respondent Panay Electric Company, Inc. (PECO) charged petitioner
Romeo P. Gerochi and all other end-users with the Universal Charge as reflected in their
respective electric bills starting from the month of July 2003. Hence, this original action.
Petitioners submit that the assailed provision of law and its IRR which sought to implement the
same are unconstitutional on the ground that the universal charge provided for under EPIRA and
sought to be implemented under Sec. 2, Rule 18 of the IRR of the said law is a tax which is to be
collected from all electric end-users and self-generating entities. The power to tax is strictly a
legislative function and as such, the delegation of said power to any executive or administrative
agency like the ERC is unconstitutional, giving the same unlimited authority. The assailed
provision clearly provides that the Universal Charge is to be determined, fixed and approved by
the ERC, hence leaving to the latter complete discretionary legislative authority. Petitioners
contend that the Universal Charge has the characteristics of a tax and is collected to fund the
operations of the NPC. On the other hand, respondent PSALM through the Office of the
Government Corporate Counsel (OGCC) contends that unlike a tax which is imposed to provide
income for public purposes, such as support of the government, administration of the law, or
payment of public expenses, the assailed Universal Charge is levied for a specific regulatory
purpose, which is to ensure the viability of the country's electric power industry. Thus, it is
exacted by the State in the exercise of its inherent police power. On this premise, PSALM submits
that there is no undue delegation of legislative power to the ERC since the latter merely exercises
a limited authority or discretion as to the execution and implementation of the provisions of the
EPIRA. Respondents Department of Energy (DOE), ERC, and NPC, through the Office of the
Solicitor General (OSG), share the same view that the Universal Charge is not a tax because it is
levied for a specific regulatory purpose, which is to ensure the viability of the country's electric
power industry, and is, therefore, an exaction in the exercise of the State's police power.
Respondents further contend that said Universal Charge does not possess the essential
characteristics of a tax, that its imposition would redound to the benefit of the electric power
industry and not to the public, and that its rate is uniformly levied on electricity end-users, unlike
a tax which is imposed based on the individual taxpayer's ability to pay. Moreover, respondents
deny that there is undue delegation of legislative power to the ERC since the EPIRA sets forth
sufficient determinable standards which would guide the ERC in the exercise of the powers
granted to it. Lastly, respondents argue that the imposition of the Universal Charge is not
oppressive and confiscatory since it is an exercise of the police power of the State and it complies
with the requirements of due process.
ISSUE: Whether or not, the Universal Charge imposed under Sec. 34 of the EPIRA is a tax?
RULING: The power to tax is an incident of sovereignty and is unlimited in its range,
acknowledging in its very nature no limits, so that security against its abuse is to be found only in
the responsibility of the legislature which imposes the tax on the constituency that is to pay it. It
is based on the principle that taxes are the lifeblood of the government, and their prompt and
certain availability is an imperious need. Thus, the theory behind the exercise of the power to tax
emanates from necessity; without taxes, government cannot fulfill its mandate of promoting the
general welfare and well-being of the people. On the other hand, police power is the power of
the state to promote public welfare by restraining and regulating the use of liberty and property.
It is the most pervasive, the least limitable, and the most demanding of the three fundamental
powers of the State. The justification is found in the Latin maxims salus populi est suprema lex
(the welfare of the people is the supreme law) and sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas (so use
your property as not to injure the property of others). As an inherent attribute of sovereignty
which virtually extends to all public needs, police power grants a wide panoply of instruments
through which the State, as parens patriae, gives effect to a host of its regulatory powers. We
have held that the power to "regulate" means the power to protect, foster, promote, preserve,
and control, with due regard for the interests, first and foremost, of the public, then of the utility
and of its patrons. The conservative and pivotal distinction between these two powers rests in
the purpose for which the charge is made. If generation of revenue is the primary purpose and
regulation is merely incidental, the imposition is a tax; but if regulation is the primary purpose,
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the fact that revenue is incidentally raised does not make the imposition a tax.36 In exacting the
assailed Universal Charge through Sec. 34 of the EPIRA, the State's police power, particularly its
regulatory dimension, is invoked. Such can be deduced from Sec. 34 which enumerates the
purposes for which the Universal Charge is imposed and which can be amply discerned as
regulatory in character. From the aforementioned purposes, it can be gleaned that the assailed
Universal Charge is not a tax, but an exaction in the exercise of the State's police power. Public
welfare is surely promoted. Moreover, it is a well-established doctrine that the taxing power may
be used as an implement of police power. The OSG is in point when it asseverates: Evidently, the
establishment and maintenance of the Special Trust Fund, under the last paragraph of Section
34, R.A. No. 9136, is well within the pervasive and non-waivable power and responsibility of the
government to secure the physical and economic survival and wellbeing of the community, that
comprehensive sovereign authority we designate as the police power of the State.46 This feature
of the Universal Charge further boosts the position that the same is an exaction imposed
primarily in pursuit of the State's police objectives. The STF reasonably serves and assures the
attainment and perpetuity of the purposes for which the Universal Charge is imposed, i.e., to
ensure the viability of the country's electric power industry.The Solicitor General is correct when
he says that the burden is on the taxpayer to prove the validity of the claimed deduction. In the
present case, however, we find that the onus has been discharged satisfactorily. The private
respondent has proved that the payment of the fees was necessary and reasonable in the light of
the efforts exerted by the payees in inducing investors and prominent businessmen to venture in
an experimental enterprise and involve themselves in a new business requiring millions of pesos.
This was no mean feat and should be, as it was, sufficiently recompensed. It is said that taxes
are what we pay for civilization society. Without taxes, the government would be paralyzed for
lack of the motive power to activate and operate it. Hence, despite the natural reluctance to
surrender part of one's hard earned income to the taxing authorities, every person who is able to
must contribute his share in the running of the government. The government for its part is
expected to respond in the form of tangible and intangible benefits intended to improve the lives
of the people and enhance their moral and material values. This symbiotic relationship is the
rationale of taxation and should dispel the erroneous notion that it is an arbitrary method of
exaction by those in the seat of power. But even as we concede the inevitability and
indispensability of taxation, it is a requirement in all democratic regimes that it be exercised
reasonably and in accordance with the prescribed procedure. If it is not, then the taxpayer has a
right to complain and the courts will then come to his succor. For all the awesome power of the
tax collector, he may still be stopped in his tracks if the taxpayer can demonstrate, as it has here,
that the law has not been observed.
These provisions contain a provision which authorizing the President, upon recommendation of
the Secretary of Finance, to raise the VAT rate to 12%, effective January 1, 2006, after specified
conditions have been satisfied.
Issues:
Whether or not there is a violation of Article VI, Section 24 of the Constitution.
Whether or not there is undue delegation of legislative power in violation of Article VI Sec 28(2)
of the Constitution.
Whether or not there is a violation of the due process and equal protection of the Constitution.
Ruling:
No, the revenue bill exclusively originated in the House of Representatives, the Senate was acting
within its constitutional power to introduce amendments to the House bill when it included
provisions in Senate Bill No. 1950 amending corporate income taxes, percentage, and excise and
franchise taxes.
No, there is no undue delegation of legislative power but only of the discretion as to the
execution of a law. This is constitutionally permissible. Congress does not abdicate its functions
or unduly delegate power when it describes what job must be done, who must do it, and what is
the scope of his authority; in our complex economy that is frequently the only way in which the
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legislative process can go forward. In this case, it is not a delegation of legislative power but a
delegation of ascertainment of facts upon which enforcement and administration of the increased
rate under the law is contingent.
No, the power of the State to make reasonable and natural classifications for the purposes of
taxation has long been established. Whether it relates to the subject of taxation, the kind of
property, the rates to be levied, or the amounts to be raised, the methods of assessment,
valuation and collection, the State’s power is entitled to presumption of validity. As a rule, the
judiciary will not interfere with such power absent a clear showing of unreasonableness,
discrimination, or arbitrariness.
E. Purpose of Taxation
1. General/Fiscal/Revenue
- Gaston v. Republic Bank, 158 SCRA 626
Facts:
Petitioners are sugar producers and planters and millers filed a MANDAMUS to implement the
privatization of Republic Planters Bank, and for the transfer of the shares in the government bank
to sugar producers and planters. (because they are allegedly the true beneficial owners of the
bank since they pay P1.00 per picul of sugar from the proceeds of sugar producers as
STABILIZATION FEES) The shares are currently held by Philsucom / Sugar Regulatory Admin.
The Solgen countered that the stabilization fees are considered government funds and that the
transfer of shares to from Philsucom to the sugar producers would be irregular.
Issue:
What is the nature of the P1.00 stabilization fees collected from sugar producers? Are they funds
held in trust for them, or are they public funds? Are the shares in the bank (paid using these
fees) owned by the government Philsucom or privately by the different sugar planters from
whom such fees were collected?
Ruling:
PUBLIC FUNDS. While it is true that the collected fees were used to buy shares in RPB, it did not
collect said fees for the account of sugar producers. The stabilization fees were charged on sugar
produced and milled which ACCRUED TO PHILSUCOM, under PD 338.
The fees collected ARE IN THE NATURE OF A TAX., which is within the power of the state to
impose FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE SUGAR INDUSTRY. They constitute sugar liens. The
collections accrue to a SPECIAL FUNDS. It is levied not purely for taxation, but for regulation, to
provide means TO STABILIZE THE SUGAR INDUSTRY. The levy is primarily an exercise of police
powers.
The fact that the State has taken money pursuant to law is sufficient to constitute them as
STATE FUNDS, even though held for a special purpose. Having been levied for a special purpose,
the revenues are treated as a special fund, administered in trust for the purpose intended. Once
the purpose has been fulfilled or abandoned, the balance will be transferred to the general funds
of gov’t.
It is a special fund since the funds are deposited in PNB, not in the National Treasury.
The sugar planters are NOT BENEFICIAL OWNERS. The money is collected from them only
because they it is also they who are to be benefited from the expenditure of funds derived from
it. The investing of the funds in RPB is not alien to the purpose since the Bank is a commodity
bank for sugar, conceived for the sugar industry’ growth and development.
Revenues derived from taxes cannot be used purely for private purposes or for the exclusive
benefit of private persons. The Stabilization Fund is to be utilized for the benefit of the ENTIRE
SUGAR INDUSTRY, and all its components, stabilization of domestic and foreign markets, since
the sugar industry is of vital importance to the country’s economy and national interest.
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Transportation and Traffic Code, requiring all tax exempt entities, among them PAL to pay motor
vehicle registration fees. Despite PAL's protestations, Elevate refused to register PAL's motor
vehicles unless the amounts imposed under Republic Act 4136 were paid. PAL thus paid, under
protest, registration fees of its motor vehicles. After paying under protest, PAL through counsel,
wrote a letter dated May 19,1971, to Land Transportation Commissioner Romeo Edu (Edu)
demanding a refund of the amounts paid. Edu denied the request for refund. Hence, PAL filed a
complaint against Edu and National Treasurer Ubaldo Carbonell (Carbonell).
The trial court dismissed PAL's complaint. PAL appealed to the Court of Appeals which in turn
certified the case to the Supreme Court.
ISSUE:
Whether or not motor vehicle registration fees are considered as taxes.
RULING:
Yes. If the purpose is primarily revenue, or if revenue is, at least, one of the real and substantial
purposes, then the exaction is properly called a tax. Such is the case of motor vehicle registration
fees. The motor vehicle registration fees are actually taxes intended for additional revenues of
the government even if one fifth or less of the amount collected is set aside for the operating
expenses of the agency administering the program.
ISSUE:
Whether or not RA 7716 is unconstitutional.
RULING:
No. In withdrawing the exemption, the law merely subjects the press to the same tax burden to
which other businesses have long ago been subject. The VAT is not a license tax. It is imposed
purely for revenue purposes.
Equality and uniformity of taxation mean that all taxable articles or kinds of property of the same
class be taxed at the same rate. It is enough that the statute or ordinance applies equally to all
persons, firms, and corporations placed in similar situation.
2. Non-revenue/Special/Regulatory
- Osmena v. Orbos, 220 SCRA 703
FACTS: Senator John Osmeña assails the constitutionality of paragraph 1c of PD 1956, as
amended by EO 137, empowering the Energy Regulatory Board (ERB) to approve the increase of
fuel prices or impose additional amounts on petroleum products which proceeds shall accrue to
the Oil Price Stabilization Fund (OPSF) established for the reimbursement to ailing oil companies
in the event of sudden price increases. The petitioner avers that the collection on oil products
establishments is an undue and invalid delegation of legislative power to tax. Further, the
petitioner points out that since a 'special fund' consists of monies collected through the taxing
power of a State, such amounts belong to the State, although the use thereof is limited to the
special purpose/objective for which it was created. It thus appears that the challenge posed by
the petitioner is premised primarily on the view that the powers granted to the ERB under P.D.
1956, as amended, partake of the nature of the taxation power of the State.
HELD: None. It seems clear that while the funds collected may be referred to as taxes, they are
exacted in the exercise of the police power of the State. Moreover, that the OPSF as a special
fund is plain from the special treatment given it by E.O. 137. It is segregated from the general
fund; and while it is placed in what the law refers to as a "trust liability account," the fund
nonetheless remains subject to the scrutiny and review of the COA. The Court is satisfied that
these measures comply with the constitutional description of a "special fund." With regard to
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the alleged undue delegation of legislative power, the Court finds that the provision conferring
the authority upon the ERB to impose additional amounts on petroleum products provides a
sufficient standard by which the authority must be exercised. In addition to the general policy of
the law to protect the local consumer by stabilizing and subsidizing domestic pump rates, P.D.
1956 expressly authorizes the ERB to impose additional amounts to augment the resources of the
Fund.
ISSUE:
Whether the amounts due from Caltex to the OPSF may be offsetted against Caltex’s outstanding
claims from said funds
RULING:
No. Taxation is no longer envisioned as a measure merely to raise revenue to support the
existence of government. Taxes may be levied with a regulatory purpose to provide means for
the rehabilitation and stabilization of a threatened industry which is affected with public interest
as to be within the police power of the State. PD 1956, as amended by EO 137, explicitly
provides that the source of OPSF is taxation. A taxpayer may not offset taxes due from the claims
he may have against the government. Taxes cannot be subject of compensation because the
government and taxpayer are not mutually creditors and debtors of each other and a claim for
taxes is not such a debt, demand,, contract or judgment as is allowed to be set-off. Hence, COA
decision is affirmed except that Caltex’s claim for reimbursement of underrecovery arising from
sales to the National Power Corporation is allowed.
On June 28, 2002, the Board of Directors of respondent Clark Development Corporation (CDC)
issued and approved Policy Guidelines on the Movement of Petroleum Fuel to and from the Clark
Special Economic Zone. In one of its provisions, it levied royalty fees to suppliers delivering
Coastal fuel from outside sources for Php0.50 per liter for those delivering fuel to CSEZ locators
not sanctioned by CDC and Php1.00 per litter for those bringing-in petroleum fuel from outside
sources. The policy guidelines were implemented effective July 27, 2002.
The petitioner Chevron Philippines Inc (formerly Caltex Philippines Inc) who is a fuel supplier to
Nanox Philippines, a locator inside the CSEZ, received a Statement of Account from CDC billing
them to pay the royalty fees amounting to Php115,000 for its fuel sales from Coastal depot to
Nanox Philippines from August 1 to September 21, 2002.
Petitioner, contending that nothing in the law authorizes CDC to impose royalty fees based on a
per unit measurement of any commodity sold within the special economic zone, protested against
the CDC and Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA). They alleged that the royalty fees
imposed had no reasonable relation to the probably expenses of regulation and that the
imposition on a per unit measurement of fuel sales was for a revenue generating purpose, thus,
akin to a “tax”.
BCDA denied the protest. The Office of the President dismissed the appeal as well for lack of
merit.
Upon appeal, CA dismissed the case. CA held that in imposing the royalty fees, CDC was
exercising its right to regulate the flow of fuel into CSEZ under the vested exclusive right to
distribute fuel within CSEZ pursuant to its Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) with Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) and Coastal Subic Bay Terminal, Inc. (CSBTI) dated April 11,
1996. The appellate court also found that royalty fees were assessed on fuel delivered, not on
the sale, by petitioner and that the basis of such imposition was petitioner’s delivery receipts to
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Nanox Philippines. The fact that revenue is incidentally also obtained does not make the
imposition a tax as long as the primary purpose of such imposition is regulation.
When elevated in SC, petitioner argued that: 1) CDC has no power to impose fees on sale of fuel
inside CSEZ on the basis of income generating functions and its right to market and distribute
goods inside the CSEZ as this would amount to tax which they have no power to impose, and
that the imposed fee is not regulatory in nature but rather a revenue generating measure; 2)
even if the fees are regulatory in nature, it is unreasonable and are grossly in excess of
regulation costs.
Respondents contended that the purpose of royalty fees is to regulate the flow of fuel to and
from the CSEZ and revenue (if any) is just an incidental product. They viewed it as a valid
exercise of police power since it is aimed at promoting the general welfare of public; that being
the CSEZ administrator, they are responsible for the safe distribution of fuel products inside the
CSEZ.
Issue:
Whether the act of CDC in imposing royalty fees can be considered as valid exercise of the police
power.
Held:
Yes. SC held that CDC was within the limits of the police power of the State when it imposed
royalty fees.
In distinguishing tax and regulation as a form of police power, the determining factor is the
purpose of the implemented measure. If the purpose is primarily to raise revenue, then it will be
deemed a tax even though the measure results in some form of regulation. On the other hand, if
the purpose is primarily to regulate, then it is deemed a regulation and an exercise of the police
power of the state, even though incidentally, revenue is generated.
In this case, SC held that the subject royalty fee was imposed for regulatory purposes and not for
generation of income or profits. The Policy Guidelines was issued to ensure the safety, security,
and good condition of the petroleum fuel industry within the CSEZ. The questioned royalty fees
form part of the regulatory framework to ensure “free flow or movement” of petroleum fuel to
and from the CSEZ. The fact that respondents have the exclusive right to distribute and market
petroleum products within CSEZ pursuant to its JVA with SBMA and CSBTI does not diminish the
regulatory purpose of the royalty fee for fuel products supplied by petitioner to its client at the
CSEZ.
However, it was erroneous for petitioner to argue that such exclusive right of respondent CDC to
market and distribute fuel inside CSEZ is the sole basis of the royalty fees imposed under the
Policy Guidelines. Being the administrator of CSEZ, the responsibility of ensuring the safe,
efficient and orderly distribution of fuel products within the Zone falls on CDC. Addressing specific
concerns demanded by the nature of goods or products involved is encompassed in the range of
services which respondent CDC is expected to provide under Sec. 2 of E.O. No. 80, in pursuance
of its general power of supervision and control over the movement of all supplies and equipment
into the CSEZ.
There can be no doubt that the oil industry is greatly imbued with public interest as it vitally
affects the general welfare. Fuel is a highly combustible product which, if left unchecked, poses a
serious threat to life and property. Also, the reasonable relation between the royalty fees
imposed on a “per liter” basis and the regulation sought to be attained is that the higher the
volume of fuel entering CSEZ, the greater the extent and frequency of supervision and inspection
required to ensure safety, security, and order within the Zone.
Respondents submit that the increased administrative costs were triggered by security risks that
have recently emerged, such as terrorist strikes. The need for regulation is more evident in the
light of 9/11 tragedy considering that what is being moved from one location to another are
highly combustible fuel products that could cause loss of lives and damage to properties.
As to the issue of reasonableness of the amount of the fees, SC held that no evidence was
adduced by the petitioner to show that the fees imposed are unreasonable. Administrative
issuances have the force and effect of law. They benefit from the same presumption of validity
and constitutionality enjoyed by statutes. These two precepts place a heavy burden upon any
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party assailing governmental regulations. Petitioner’s plain allegations are simply not enough to
overcome the presumption of validity and reasonableness of the subject imposition.
FACTS: TEFASCO is a domestic corporation organized and existing under the laws of the
Philippines with principal place of business at Barrio Ilang, Davao City. It is engaged in the
business of providing port and terminal facilities as well as arrastre, stevedoring and other port-
related services at its own private port at Barrio Ilang. Sometime in 1975 TEFASCO submitted to
PPA a proposal for the construction of a specialized terminal complex with port facilities and a
provision for port services in Davao City. To ease the acute congestion in the government ports
at Sasa and Sta. Ana, Davao City, PPA welcomed the proposal and organized an inter-agency
committee to study the plan. On April 21, 1976 the PPA Board of Directors passed Resolution No.
7 accepting and approving TEFASCO's project proposal. TEFASCO contracted dollar loans from
private commercial institutions abroad to construct its specialized terminal complex with port
facilities and thereafter poured millions worth of investments in the process of building the port.
Long after TEFASCO broke ground with massive infrastructure work, the PPA Board curiously
passed on October 1, 1976 Resolution No. 50 under which TEFASCO, without asking for one, was
compelled to submit an application for construction permit. Without the consent of TEFASCO, the
application imposed additional significant conditions. Two (2) years after the completion of the
port facilities and the commencement of TEFASCO's port operations, or on June 10, 1978, PPA
again issued to TEFASCO another permit, designated as Special Permit No. CO/CO-1-067802,
under which more onerous conditions were foisted on TEFASCO’s port operations. In the
purported permit appeared for the first time the contentious provisions for ten percent (10%)
government share out of arrastre and stevedoring gross income and one hundred percent
(100%) wharfage and berthing charges. Subsequent exactions of PPA included: (a) Admin. Order
09-81, s. 1981, notifying all arrastre and stevedoring operators, whether they do business in
government owned port facilities, that special services income be subjected to "government
share" equivalent to ten percent (10%) thereof; and, (b) Memo. Circ. 36-82, s. 1982, mandating
an assessment of one hundred percent (100%) wharfage dues on commercial and third-party
cargoes regardless of extent of use of private port facilities and one hundred percent (100%)
berthing charges on every foreign vessel docking at private wharves loading or discharging
commercial or third-party cargoes. TEFASCO repeatedly asked PPA for extensions to pay these
additional obligations and for reduction in the rates. But the PPA's response was final and non-
negotiable statements of arrears and current accounts and threats of business closure in case of
failure to pay them.
ISSUE: Whether the imposition by PPA of ten percent government share out of arrastre and
stevedoring gross income of TEFASCO valid. (NO)
RULING: Fourthly, we also declare void the imposition by PPA of ten percent (10%), later
reduced to six percent (6%), government share out of arrastre and stevedoring gross income of
TEFASCO. This exaction was never mentioned in the contract, much less is it a binding
prestation, between TEFASCO and PPA. What was clearly stated in the terms and conditions
appended to PPA Resolution No. 7 was for TEFASCO to pay and/or secure from the proper
authorities "all fees and/or permits pertinent to the construction and operation of the proposed
project." The government share demanded and collected from the gross income of TEFASCO
from its arrastre and stevedoring activities in TEFASCO's wholly owned port is certainly not a fee
or in any event a proper condition in a regulatory permit. Rather it is an onerous "contractual
stipulation" which finds no root or basis or reference even in the contract aforementioned. We
stress that the cause of the contract between TEFASCO and PPA was, on the part of the former,
to engage in the business of operating its privately owned port facilities, and for the latter, to
decongest port traffic in Davao City and concomitantly to enhance regional trade. The records of
the project acceptance made by PPA indicate that the contract was executed not to earn income
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for PPA or the government as justification for the subsequent and unfair imposition of
government share in the arrastre and stevedoring gross income of TEFASCO. Hence this charge
was obviously an afterthought conceived by PPA only after the TEFASCO port had already begun
its operations. The sharing scheme only meant that PPA would piggy back unreasonably on the
substantial investment and labor of TEFASCO. As the scheme was subsequently stipulated on
percentage of gross income, it actually penalized TEFASCO for its hand work and substantial
capital expenditures in the TEFASCO port and terminal. Moreover, PPA is bereft of any authority
to impose whatever amount it pleases as government share in the gross income of TEFASCO
from its arrastre and stevedoring operations. As an elementary principle of law, license taxation
must not be "so unreasonable to show a purpose to prohibit a business which is not itself
injurious to public health or morals." In the case at bar, the absurd and confiscatory character of
government share is convincingly proved by PPA's decision itself to abandon the disadvantageous
scheme through Administrative Order No. 06-95 dated 4 December 1995, Liberalized Regulation
on Private Ports Construction, Development, and Operation. The PPA issuance scrapped
government share in the income of private ports where no government facilities had been
installed and in place thereof imposed a onetime privilege fee of ₱20,000.00 per annum for
commercial ports and ₱10,000.00 yearly for noncommercial ports. In passing, we believe that
this impost is more in consonance with the description of government share as consideration for
the "supervision inherent in the upgrading and improvement of port operations, of which said
services are an integral part." We do not also agree that TEFASCO subsequently acceded to
paying the government share in its gross income from its arrastre and stevedoring operations,
and in recognizing arrears for such charge. The Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) which it
subsequently signed with PPA did not give TEFASCO any benefit so that we cannot conclude that
there was indeed a voluntary settlement between them. Rather it could be described aptly as an
imposition under actual threats of closure of TEFASCO's port. Verily the MOA was meant to cloak
semblance of validity upon that particular charge since there was nothing in the original
TEFASCO-PPA contract authorizing the PPA to collect any share in the gross income of TEFASCO
in its arrastre and stevedoring operations. The MOA is invalid for want of consideration and
consent. As such, it is an invalid novation of the original agreement between TEFASCO and PPA
as embodied in the inter-agency committee report, PPA Resolution No. 7 and PPA letter dated
May 7, 1976 and its enclosure. Truly, the MOA was a set of stipulations executed under undue
pressure on TEFASCO of permanent closure of its port and terminal. As the TEFASCO investment
was worth millions of dollars in loans and equities, PPA's posture of prohibiting it from engaging
in the bulk of its business presented it with no reasonable freedom of choice but to accept and
sign the MOA. Furthermore, the MOA suffers from utter want of consideration since nothing more
could have been stipulated in the agreement when every detail of port operation had already
been previously spelled out and sanctioned in the original contract. The belated MOA citations of
PPA’s recognition of TEFASCO's facility as a private port and provision of arrastre and stevedoring
and repair services were all part of the agreement from 1976 when theproject proposal was
approved by the PPA Board. Under these circumstances, it cannot be said that TEFASCO
embraced voluntarily the unfair imposition in the MOA that inevitably would cause, as it did, its
own bankruptcy. In sum, TEFASCO is entitled to Five Million Ninety-Five Thousand Thirty Pesos
and Seventeen Centavos (₱5,095,030.17) for reimbursement of what PPA illegally collected as
"government share" in the gross income of TEFASCO's arrastre and stevedoring operations for
1977 to 1991
FACTS: Petitioners assail the constitutionality of Section 4 of Republic Act (RA) No. 7432, as
amended by RA 9257, and the implementing rules and regulations issued by the DSWD and DOF
insofar as these allow business establishments to claim the 20% discount given to senior citizens
as a tax deduction. Feeling aggrieved by the tax deduction scheme, petitioners filed the present
recourse, praying that Section 4 of RA 7432, as amended by RA 9257, and the implementing
rules and regulations issued by the DSWD and the DOF be declared unconstitutional insofar as
these allow business establishments to claim the 20% discount given to senior citizens as a tax
deduction; that the DSWD and the DOF be prohibited from enforcing the same; and that the tax
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credit treatment of the 20% discount under the former Section 4 (a) of RA 7432 be reinstated.
Petitioners emphasize that they are not questioning the 20% discount granted to senior citizens
but are only assailing the constitutionality of the tax deduction scheme prescribed under RA 9257
and the implementing rules and regulations issued by the DSWD and the DOF. Petitioners posit
that the tax deduction scheme contravenes Article III, Section 9 of the Constitution, which
provides that: "[p]rivate property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation."
ISSUE: Whether the 20% discount given to senior citizens is an exercise of the power of eminent
domain, thus, requiring the payment of just compensation. (NO)
RULING: The privilege enjoyed by senior citizens does not come directly from the State, but
rather from the private establishments concerned. Accordingly, the tax credit benefit granted to
these establishments can be deemed as their just compensation for private property taken by the
State for public use. The concept of public use is no longer confined to the traditional notion of
use by the public, but held synonymous with public interest, public benefit, public welfare, and
public convenience. The discount privilege to which our senior citizens are entitled is actually a
benefit enjoyed by the general public to which these citizens belong. The discounts given would
have entered the coffers and formed part of the gross sales of the private establishments
concerned, were it not for RA 7432. The permanent reduction in their total revenues is a forced
subsidy corresponding to the taking of private property for public use or benefit. As a result of
the 20 percent discount imposed by RA 7432, respondent becomes entitled to a just
compensation. This term refers not only to the issuance of a tax credit certificate indicating the
correct amount of the discounts given, but also to the promptness in its release. Equivalent to
the payment of property taken by the State, such issuance — when not done within a reasonable
time from the grant of the discounts — cannot be considered as just compensation. In effect,
respondent is made to suffer the consequences of being immediately deprived of its revenues
while awaiting actual receipt, through the certificate, of the equivalent amount it needs to cope
with the reduction in its revenues. Besides, the taxation power can also be used as an implement
for the exercise of the power of eminent domain. Tax measures are but "enforced contributions
exacted on pain of penal sanctions" and "clearly imposed for a public purpose." In recent years,
the power to tax has indeed become a most effective tool to realize social justice, public welfare,
and the equitable distribution of wealth. While it is a declared commitment under Section 1 of RA
7432, social justice "cannot be invoked to trample on the rights of property owners who under
our Constitution and laws are also entitled to protection. The social justice consecrated in our
[C]onstitution [is] not intended to take away rights from a person and give them to another who
is not entitled thereto." For this reason, a just compensation for income that is taken away from
respondent becomes necessary. It is in the tax credit that our legislators find support to realize
social justice, and no administrative body can alter that fact. To put it differently, a private
establishment that merely breaks even — without the discounts yet — will surely start to incur
losses because of such discounts. The same effect is expected if its mark-up is less than 20
percent, and if all its sales come from retail purchases by senior citizens. Aside from the
observation we have already raised earlier, it will also be grossly unfair to an establishment if the
discounts will be treated merely as deductions from either its gross income or its gross sales.
Operating at a loss through no fault of its own, it will realize that the tax credit limitation under
RR 2-94 is inutile, if not improper. Worse, profit-generating businesses will be put in a better
position if they avail themselves of tax credits denied those that are losing, because no taxes are
due from the latter. This, notwithstanding, we went on to rule in Carlos Superdrug Corporation
that the 20% discount and tax deduction scheme is a valid exercise of the police power of the
State. The present case, thus, affords an opportunity for us to clarify the above-quoted
statements in Central Luzon Drug Corporation and Carlos Superdrug Corporation. First, we note
that the above-quoted disquisition on eminent domain in Central Luzon Drug Corporation is obiter
dicta and, thus, not binding precedent. As stated earlier, in Central Luzon Drug Corporation, we
ruled that the BIR acted ultra vires when it effectively treated the 20% discount as a tax
deduction, under Sections 2.i and 4 of RR No. 2-94, despite the clear wording of the previous law
that the same should be treated as a tax credit. We were, therefore, not confronted in that case
with the issue as to whether the 20% discount is an exercise of police power or eminent domain.
Second, although we adverted to Central Luzon Drug Corporation in our ruling in Carlos
Superdrug Corporation, this referred only to preliminary matters. A fair reading of Carlos
Superdrug Corporation would show that we categorically ruled therein that the 20% discount is a
valid exercise of police power. Thus, even if the current law, through its tax deduction scheme
(which abandoned the tax credit scheme under the previous law), does not provide for a peso for
peso reimbursement of the 20% discount given by private establishments, no constitutional
infirmity obtains because, being a valid exercise of police power, payment of just compensation is
not warranted. We have carefully reviewed the basis of our ruling in Carlos Superdrug
Corporation and we find no cogent reason to overturn, modify or abandon it. We also note that
Page 42 of 113
petitioners’ arguments are a mere reiteration of those raised and resolved in Carlos Superdrug
Corporation. Thus, we sustain Carlos Superdrug Corporation.
F. Characteristics of Taxation
- Planters Product, Inc. v. Fertiphil Phil. Corp., 548 SCRA 485
An inherent limitation on the power of taxation is public purpose. Taxes are exacted only for a
public purpose. They cannot be used for purely private purposes or for the exclusive benefit of
private persons. The reason for this is simple. The power to tax exists for the general welfare;
hence, implicit in its power is the limitation that it should be used only for a public purpose. It
would be a robbery for the State to tax its citizens and use the funds generated for a private
purpose. As an old United States case bluntly put it: "To lay with one hand, the power of the
government on the property of the citizen, and with the other to bestow it upon favored
individuals to aid private enterprises and build up private fortunes, is nonetheless a robbery
because it is done under the forms of law and is called taxation." Taxes are exacted only for a
public purpose. The ₱10 levy is unconstitutional because it was not for a public purpose. The levy
was imposed to give undue benefit to PPI. FACTS: Petitioner PPI and private respondent Fertiphil
are private corporations incorporated under Philippine laws. They are both engaged in the
importation and distribution of fertilizers, pesticides and agricultural chemicals. On June 3, 1985,
then President Ferdinand Marcos, exercising his legislative powers, issued LOI No. 1465 which
provided, among others, for the imposition of a capital recovery component (CRC) on the
domestic sale of all grades of fertilizers in the Philippines. The LOI provides: 3. The Administrator
of the Fertilizer Pesticide Authority to include in its fertilizer pricing formula a capital contribution
component of not less than ₱10 per bag. This capital contribution shall be collected until
adequate capital is raised to make PPI viable. Such capital contribution shall be applied by FPA to
all domestic sales of fertilizers in the Philippines. Pursuant to the LOI, Fertiphil paid ₱10 for every
bag of fertilizer it sold in the domestic market to the Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority (FPA). FPA
then remitted the amount collected to the Far East Bank and Trust Company, the depositary
bank of PPI. Fertiphil paid ₱6,689,144 to FPA from July 8, 1985 to January 24, 1986. After the
1986 Edsa Revolution, FPA voluntarily stopped the imposition of the ₱10 levy. With the return of
democracy, Fertiphil demanded from PPI a refund of the amounts it paid under LOI No. 1465,
but PPI refused to accede to the demand. Fertiphil filed a complaint for collection and damages
against FPA and PPI with the RTC in Makati. It questioned the constitutionality of LOI No. 1465
for being unjust, unreasonable, oppressive, invalid and an unlawful imposition that amounted to
a denial of due process of law. Fertiphil alleged that the LOI solely favored PPI, a privately owned
corporation, which used the proceeds to maintain its monopoly of the fertilizer industry. In its
Answer, FPA, through the Solicitor General, countered that the issuance of LOI No. 1465 was a
valid exercise of the police power of the State in ensuring the stability of the fertilizer industry in
the country. It also averred that Fertiphil did not sustain any damage from the LOI because the
burden imposed by the levy fell on the ultimate consumer, not the seller.
RULING: Police power and the power of taxation are inherent powers of the State. These powers
are distinct and have different tests for validity. Police power is the power of the State to enact
legislation that may interfere with personal liberty or property in order to promote the general
welfare,39 while the power of taxation is the power to levy taxes to be used for public purpose.
The main purpose of police power is the regulation of a behavior or conduct, while taxation is
revenue generation. The "lawful subjects" and "lawful means" tests are used to determine the
validity of a law enacted under the police power. The power of taxation, on the other hand, is
circumscribed by inherent and constitutional limitations. We agree with the RTC that the
imposition of the levy was an exercise by the State of its taxation power. While it is true that the
power of taxation can be used as an implement of police power, the primary purpose of the levy
is revenue generation. If the purpose is primarily revenue, or if revenue is, at least, one of the
real and substantial purposes, then the exaction is properly called a tax Taxation may be made
the implement of the state's police power (Lutz v. Araneta, 98 Phil. 148). If the purpose is
primarily revenue, or if revenue is, at least, one of the real and substantial purposes, then the
exaction is properly called a tax. Such is the case of motor vehicle registration fees. The same
provision appears as Section 59(b) in the Land Transportation Code. It is patent therefrom that
the legislators had in mind a regulatory tax as the law refers to the imposition on the registration,
operation or ownership of a motor vehicle as a "tax or fee." x x x Simply put, if the exaction
under Rep. Act 4136 were merely a regulatory fee, the imposition in Rep. Act 5448 need not be
an "additional" tax. Rep. Act 4136 also speaks of other "fees" such as the special permit fees for
certain types of motor vehicles (Sec. 10) and additional fees for change of registration (Sec. 11).
These are not to be understood as taxes because such fees are very minimal to be revenue-
raising. Thus, they are not mentioned by Sec. 59(b) of the Code as taxes like the motor vehicle
Page 43 of 113
registration fee and chauffeurs’ license fee. Such fees are to go into the expenditures of the Land
Transportation Commission as provided for in the last proviso of Sec. 61. The ₱10 levy under LOI
No. 1465 is too excessive to serve a mere regulatory purpose. The levy, no doubt, was a big
burden on the seller or the ultimate consumer. It increased the price of a bag of fertilizer by as
much as five percent. A plain reading of the LOI also supports the conclusion that the levy was
for revenue generation. The LOI expressly provided that the levy was imposed "until adequate
capital is raised to make PPI viable." Taxes are exacted only for a public purpose. The ₱10 levy is
unconstitutional because it was not for a public purpose. The levy was imposed to give undue
benefit to PPI. An inherent limitation on the power of taxation is public purpose. Taxes are
exacted only for a public purpose. They cannot be used for purely private purposes or for the
exclusive benefit of private persons. The reason for this is simple. The power to tax exists for the
general welfare; hence, implicit in its power is the limitation that it should be used only for a
public purpose. It would be a robbery for the State to tax its citizens and use the funds
generated for a private purpose. As an old United States case bluntly put it: "To lay with one
hand, the power of the government on the property of the citizen, and with the other to bestow
it upon favored individuals to aid private enterprises and build up private fortunes, is nonetheless
a robbery because it is done under the forms of law and is called taxation." The term "public
purpose" is not defined. It is an elastic concept that can be hammered to fit modern standards.
Jurisprudence states that "public purpose" should be given a broad interpretation. It does not
only pertain to those purposes which are traditionally viewed as essentially government
functions, such as building roads and delivery of basic services, but also includes those purposes
designed to promote social justice. Thus, public money may now be used for the relocation of
illegal settlers, low-cost housing and urban or agrarian reform. While the categories of what may
constitute a public purpose are continually expanding in light of the expansion of government
functions, the inherent requirement that taxes can only be exacted for a public purpose still
stands. Public purpose is the heart of a tax law. When a tax law is only a mask to exact funds
from the public when its true intent is to give undue benefit and advantage to a private
enterprise, that law will not satisfy the requirement of "public purpose." The purpose of a law is
evident from its text or inferable from other secondary sources. Here, We agree with the RTC
and that CA that the levy imposed under LOI No. 1465 was not for a public purpose. First, the
LOI expressly provided that the levy be imposed to benefit PPI, a private company. The purpose
is explicit from Clause 3 of the law. Second, the LOI provides that the imposition of the ₱10 levy
was conditional and dependent upon PPI becoming financially "viable." This suggests that the
levy was actually imposed to benefit PPI. The LOI notably does not fix a maximum amount when
PPI is deemed financially "viable." Worse, the liability of Fertiphil and other domestic sellers of
fertilizer to pay the levy is made indefinite. They are required to continuously pay the levy until
adequate capital is raised for PPI.Third, the RTC and the CA held that the levies paid under the
LOI were directly remitted and deposited by FPA to Far East Bank and Trust Company, the
depositary bank of PPI. This proves that PPI benefited from the LOI. It is also proves that the
main purpose of the law was to give undue benefit and advantage to PPI. Fourth, the levy was
used to pay the corporate debts of PPI. A reading of the Letter of Understanding dated May 18,
1985 signed by then Prime Minister Cesar Virata reveals that PPI was in deep financial problem
because of its huge corporate debts. There were pending petitions for rehabilitation against PPI
before the Securities and Exchange Commission. The government guaranteed payment of PPI’s
debts to its foreign creditors. To fund the payment, President Marcos issued LOI No. 1465. All
told, the RTC and the CA did not err in holding that the levy imposed under LOI No. 1465 was
not for a public purpose. LOI No. 1465 failed to comply with the public purpose requirement for
tax laws.
FACTS: This petition was filed on September 1, 1986 by petitioner on his own behalf and
purportedly on behalf of other videogram operators adversely affected. It assails the
constitutionality of Presidential Decree No. 1987 entitled "An Act Creating the Videogram
Page 44 of 113
Regulatory Board" with broad powers to regulate and supervise the videogram industry. The
petitioner alleges that the said act is unconstitutional since Section 10 thereof, which imposes a
tax of 30% on the gross receipts payable to the local government is a RIDER and the same is not
germane to the subject matter thereof and that the tax imposed is harsh, confiscatory,
oppressive and/or in unlawful restraint of trade in violation of the due process clause of the
Constitution.
ISSUE: Whether the thirty percent (30%) tax imposed is unconstitutional for being harsh,
oppressive, confiscatory, and restrains trade. (NO)
RULING: Taxation has been made the implement of the state's police power. The levy of the 30% tax is
for a public purpose. It was imposed primarily to answer the need for regulating the video industry,
particularly because of the rampant film piracy, the flagrant violation of intellectual property rights, and
the proliferation of pornographic video tapes. And while it was also an objective of the DECREE to protect
the movie industry, the tax remains a valid imposition.
We find no clear violation of the Constitution which would justify us in pronouncing Presidential Decree
No. 1987 as unconstitutional and void. While the underlying objective of the DECREE is to protect the
moribund movie industry, there is no question that public welfare is at bottom of its enactment,
considering "the unfair competition posed by rampant film piracy; the erosion of the moral fiber of the
viewing public brought about by the availability of unclassified and unreviewed video tapes containing
pornographic films and films with brutally violent sequences; and losses in government revenues due to
the drop in theatrical attendance, not to mention the fact that the activities of video establishments are
virtually untaxed since mere payment of Mayor's permit and municipal license fees are required to
engage in business."
ISSUE:
Is Roxas liable?
RULING:
No. It should be borne in mind that the sale of the farmlands to the very farmers who tilled them
for generations was not only in consonance with, but more in obedience to the request and
pursuant to the policy of our Government to allocate lands to the landless.
In order to maintain the general public’s trust and confidence in the Government this power must
be used justly and not treacherously. It does not conform with the sense of justice for the
Government to persuade the taxpayer to lend it a helping hand and later on penalize him for duly
answering the urgent call.
The power of taxation is sometimes called also the power to destroy. Therefore it should be
exercised with caution to minimize injury to the proprietary rights of a taxpayer. It must be
exercised fairly, equally and uniformly, lest the tax collector kill the "hen that lays the golden
egg". And, in order to maintain the general public's trust and confidence in the Government
this power must be used justly and not treacherously. It does not conform with Our sense of
justice in the instant case for the Government to persuade the taxpayer to lend it a helping
hand and later on to penalize him for duly answering the urgent call.
In fine, Roxas cannot be considered a real estate dealer and is not liable for 100% of the sale.
Pursuant to Section 34 of the Tax Code, the lands sold to the farmers are capital assets and the
gain derived from the sale thereof is capital gain, taxable only to the extent of 50%.
Page 45 of 113
The Philippines joined World Trade Organization as a founding member with the goal of
improving Philippine access to foreign markets, especially its major trading partners, through the
reduction of tariffs on its exports. The President also saw in the WTO the opening of new
opportunities for the services sector, the reduction of costs and uncertainty associated with
exporting and the attraction of more investments into the country. On April 15, 1994, respondent
Navarro, then DTI Secretary, signed in Marrakesh, Morocco, the Final Act Embodying the Results
of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Negotiations. On December 14, 1994, the Senate concurred
in the ratification of the President of the Philippines of the Agreement Establishing the WTO
which includes various agreements and associated legal instruments. On December 16, 1994,the
President signed the Instrument of Ratification.
ISSUES
1. Whether the WTO Agreement violated the mandated economic nationalism by the Constitution
2. Whether the provisions of the WTO Agreement restricts and impairs Philippine sovereignty,
specifically the legislative power vested in the Congress
3. Whether the Senate concurrence in the WTO Agreement and its annexes but not in the other
documents referred to in the Final Act is defective and insufficient and thus constitutes abuse of
discretion
RULING
In the foregoing treaties, the Philippines has effectively agreed to limit the
exercise of its sovereign powers of taxation, eminent domain and police power.
The underlying consideration in this partial surrender of sovereignty is the
reciprocal commitment of the other contracting states in granting the same
privilege and immunities to the Philippines, its officials and its citizens. The same
reciprocity characterizes the Philippine commitments under WTO-GATT.
1. No. The Constitution did not intend to pursue an isolationist policy. It did not shut out foreign
investments, goods and services in the development of the Philippine economy. In fact, it allows
an exchange on the basis of equality and reciprocity, frowning only on foreign competition that is
unfair. The constitutional policy of a self-reliant and independent national economy does not
necessarily rule out the entry of foreign investments, goods and services. It contemplates neither
economic seclusion nor mendicancy in the international community.
2. No. While sovereignty has traditionally been deemed absolute and all-encompassing on the
domestic level, it is however subject to restrictions and limitations voluntarily agreed to by the
Philippines, expressly or impliedly, as a member of the family of nations. Unquestionably, the
Constitution did not envision a hermit-type isolation of the country from the rest of the world. By
the doctrine of incorporation, the country is bound by generally accepted principles of
international law, which are considered to be automatically part of our laws. A treaty engagement
is not a mere moral obligation on the parties. By their inherent nature, treaties really limit or
restrict the absoluteness of sovereignty. The Philippines has effectively agreed to limit the
exercise of its sovereign powers of taxation, eminent domain and police power. The underlying
consideration in this partial sovereignty is the reciprocal commitment of the other contracting
states in granting the same privilege and immunities to the Philippines, its officials and its
citizens. The same reciprocity characterizes the same commitments under WTO-GATT. The point
is that a portion of sovereignty may be waived without violating the Constitution, based on the
rationale that the Philippines adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part
of the law of the land and adheres to the policy of cooperation and amity with all nations.
3. No. The petitioners submit that concurrence in the WTO Agreement alone is flawed because it
is in effect a rejection of the Final Act. The Court held that a final act is an instrument which
records the winding up of the proceedings of a diplomatic conference and not the treaty itself.
On the other hand, the WTO Agreement itself expresses what multilateral agreements are
deemed included as its integral parts. It should be added that the Senate was well-aware of what
it was concurring in as shown by the member’s deliberation.
Page 46 of 113
Petitioner LTO explains that one of the functions of the national government that, indeed, has
been transferred to local government units is the franchising authority over tricycles-for-hire of
the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board ("LTFRB") but not, it asseverates, the
authority of LTO to register all motor vehicles and to issue to qualified persons of licenses to
drive such vehicles.
The RTC and CA ruled that the power to give registration and license for driving tricycles has
been devolved to LGU's.
Issue:
Whether or not, the registration of tricycles was given to LGU's, hence the ordinance is a valid
exercise of police power.
Ruling:
No, based on the-"Guidelines to Implement the Devolution of LTFRBs Franchising Authority
over Tricycles-For-Hire to Local Government units pursuant to the Local Government Code"- the
newly delegated powers to LGU's pertain to the franchising and regulatory powers exercised by
the LTFRB and not to the functions of the LTO relative to the registration of motor vehicles and
issuance of licenses for the driving thereof. Corollarily, the exercised of a police power must be
through a valid delegation. In this case the police power of registering tricycles was not
delegated to the LGU’s, but remained in the LTO.
Clearly unaffected by the Local Government Code are the powers of LTO under R.A. No.4136
requiring the registration of all kinds of motor vehicles "used or operated on or upon any public
highway" in the country.
The Commissioner of Land Transportation and his deputies are empowered at anytime to
examine and inspect such motor vehicles to determine whether said vehicles are registered, or
are unsightly, unsafe, improperly marked or equipped, or otherwise unfit to be operated on
because of possible excessive damage to highways, bridges and other infrastructures. The LTO is
additionally charged with being the central repository and custodian of all records of all motor
vehicles.
Adds the Court, the reliance made by respondents on the broad taxing power of local
government units, specifically under Section 133 of the Local Government Code, is tangential.
Police power and taxation, along with eminent domain, are inherent powers of sovereignty
which the State might share with local government units by delegation given under a
constitutional or a statutory fiat. All these inherent powers are for a public purpose and legislative
in nature but the similarities just about end there. The basic aim of police power is public good
and welfare. Taxation, in its case, focuses on the power of government to raise revenue in order
to support its existence and carry out its legitimate objectives. Although correlative to each other
in many respects, the grant of one does not necessarily carry with it the grant of the other. The
two powers are, by tradition and jurisprudence, separate and distinct powers, varying in their
respective concepts, character, scopes and limitations.
To construe the tax provisions of Section 133 (1) of the LGC indistinctively would result in the
repeal to that extent of LTO's regulatory power which evidently has not been intended. If it were
otherwise, the law could have just said so in Section 447 and 458 of Book III of the Local
Government Code in the same manner that the specific devolution of LTFRB's power on
franchising of tricycles has been provided. Repeal by implication is not favored.
The power over tricycles granted under Section 458(a)(3)(VI) of the Local Government Code
to LGUs is the power to regulate their operation and to grant franchises for the operation thereof.
The exclusionary clause contained in the tax provisions of Section 133 (1) of the Local
Government Code must not be held to have had the effect of withdrawing the express power of
LTO to cause the registration of all motor vehicles and the issuance of licenses for the driving
thereof. These functions of the LTO are essentially regulatory in nature, exercised pursuant to
the police power of the State, whose basic objectives are to achieve road safety by insuring the
road worthiness of these motor vehicles and the competence of drivers prescribed by R. A. 4136.
Not insignificant is the rule that a statute must not be construed in isolation but must be taken in
harmony with the extant body of laws.
LGUs indubitably now have the power to regulate the operation of tricycles-for-hire and to
grant franchises for the operation thereof, and not to issue registration.
Ergo, the ordinance being repugnant to a statute is void and ultra vires.
Page 47 of 113
adviser of the city, that all out-of-town deliveries of matches are not subject to sales tax. The
trial court dismissed the complaint against the city treasurer.
Issue: WON the city treasurer can be held liable for damages under art. 27 of the CC
ISSUE: Whether the trial court erred in adjudicating the money claim of the petitioner in an
action for
declaratory relief
RULING: No. In its petition for declaratory relief, petitioner-appellee alleged that by reason of the
enforcement of the municipal ordinance by respondents it was forced to pay under protest the
fees
imposed pursuant to the said ordinance, and accordingly, one of the reliefs prayed for by the
petitioner
was that the respondents be ordered to refund all the amounts it paid to respondent Municipal
Treasurer during the pendency of the case. The inclusion of said allegation and prayer in the
petition
was not objected to by the respondents in their answer. During the trial, evidence of the
payments
made by the petitioner was introduced. Respondents were thus fully aware of the petitioner's
claim for
refund and of what would happen if the ordinance were to be declared invalid by the court.
The action for declaratory relief may be converted into an ordinary action and the parties allowed
to file
such pleadings as may be necessary or proper, if before the final termination of the case "a
breach or
violation of an...ordinance, should take place." In the present case, no breach or violation of the
ordinance occurred.
- Lutz v Araneta
Page 48 of 113
FACTS:
Walter Lutz, as Judicial Administrator of the Intestate Estate of Antonio Jayme Ledesma, sought
to recover the sum of
P14,666.40 paid by the estate as taxes from the Commissioner under Section e of
Commonwealth Act 567 or the Sugar Adjustment Act, alleging that such tax is unconstitutional as
it levied for the aid and support of the sugar industry exclusively, which is in his opinion not a
public purpose.
ISSUE:
Is the tax valid?
HELD:
Yes. The tax is levied with a regulatory purpose, i.e. to provide means for the rehabilitation and
stabilization of the threatened sugar industry. The act is primarily an exercise of police power and
is not a pure exercise of taxing power.
As sugar production is one of the great industries of the Philippines and its promotion, protection
and advancement redounds greatly to the general welfare, the legislature found that the general
welfare demanded that the industry should be stabilized, and provided that the distribution of
benefits had to sustain.
Further, it cannot be said that the devotion of tax money to experimental stations to seek
increase of efficiency in sugar production, utilization of by-products, etc., as well as to the
improvement of living and working conditions in sugar mills and plantations without any part of
such money being channeled directly to private persons, constitute expenditure of tax money for
private purposes.
Hence, the tax is valid.
ISSUE: WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE COMPUTATION OF
SUPERVISION AND REGULATION FEES UNDER SECTION 40 (F) OF THE PUBLIC SERVICE ACT
SHOULD BE BASED ON THE PAR VALUE OF THE SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL STOCK.
RULING: The law in point is clear and categorical. The basis for computation of the fee to be
charged by NTC on PLDT is the capital stock subscribed or paid and not the property and
equipment. It bears stressing that it is not the NTC that imposed such a fee. It is the legislature
itself. Since Congress has the power to exercise the State inherent powers of Police Power,
Eminent Domain and Taxation, the distinction between police power and the power to tax, which
could be significant if the exercising authority were mere political subdivisions, would not be of
any moment when, as in the case under consideration, Congress itself exercises the power. All
that is to be done would be to apply and enforce the law when sufficiently definitive and not
constitutional infirm.
Page 49 of 113
Section 21 of Presidential Decree 464 provides that every 5 years starting calendar year 1978,
there shall be a provincial or city general revision of real property assessments. The general
revision was completed in 1984.
On November 25, 1986, President Corazon Aquino issued EO 73 stating that beginning January 1,
1987, the 1984 assessments shall be the basis of real property taxes. Francisco Chavez, a
taxpayer and landowner, questioned the constitutionality of EO 74. He alleges that it will bring
unreasonable increase in real property taxes.
ISSUE:
Is EO 73 constitutional?
RULING:
Yes. Without EO 73, the basis for collection of real property taxes will still be the 1978 revision of
property values. Certainly, to continue collecting real property taxes based on valuations arrived
at several years ago, in disregard of the increases in the value of real properties that have
occurred since then is not in consonance with a sound tax system.
Fiscal adequacy, which is one of the characteristics of a sound tax system, requires that sources
of revenue must be adequate to meet government expenditures and their variations.
- Taganito Mining v. CIR, CTA Case No. 4702, April 28, 1995
Taganito Mining is a producer and exporter of Beneficiated Nickel Silicate Ores and Chromite
Ores. It paid excise taxes for its shipments of said minerals to Japan for the period starting July
to December 1990. It later filed a claim for refund with the CIR for alleged overpaid 5% excise
tax. Such claim was anchored on the belief that the basis for the excise tax should be the value
of the minerals at the time of their removal or export. Since the exchange rate used at the time
of remittance of the excise tax was HIGHER than the rate at the time of their removal of the
minerals, it argued that there was overpayment of excise taxes. Without waiting for the CIR’s
decision, Taganito filed a Petition for Review with the CTA. It later amended the petition and
increased the amount claimed. The CTA granted Taganito’s petition but only as to the amount
claimed before the CIR.
FACTS:
Petitioners filed this petition for declaratory relief1 assailing the validity of the impending imposition of value-added tax
(VAT) by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) on the collections of tollway operators.
Petitioners hold the view that Congress did not, when it enacted the NIRC, intend to include toll fees within the meaning of
"sale of services" that are subject to VAT; that a toll fee is a "user’s tax," not a sale of services; that to impose VAT on toll
fees would amount to a tax on public service; and that, since VAT was never factored into the formula for computing toll
fees, its imposition would violate the non-impairment clause of the constitution.
The government, represented by the respondents, avers that the NIRC imposes VAT on all kinds of services of franchise
grantees, including tollway operations, except where the law provides otherwise;
The government also argues that petitioners have no right to invoke the non-impairment of contracts clause since they
clearly have no personal interest in existing toll operating agreements (TOAs) between the government and tollway
operators.
ISSUES:
1. Whether or not the government is unlawfully expanding VAT coverage by including tollway operators and tollway
operations in the terms "franchise grantees" and "sale of services" under Section 108 of the Code; and
2. Whether or not the imposition of VAT on tollway operators a) amounts to a tax on tax and not a tax on services; b) is not
administratively feasible and cannot be implemented.
HELD:
1. NO.
It is plain from the law (Section 108 of the NIRC) imposes VAT on "all kinds of services" rendered in the Philippines for a fee,
including those specified in the list. The enumeration of affected services is not exclusive. By qualifying "services" with the words "all
Page 50 of 113
kinds," Congress has given the term "services" an all-encompassing meaning. Thus, every activity that can be imagined as a form of
"service" rendered for a fee should be deemed included unless some provision of law especially excludes it.
P.D. 1112 or the Toll Operation Decree establishes the legal basis for the services that tollway operators render. Essentially, tollway
operators construct, maintain, and operate expressways, also called tollways, at the operators’ expense. In consideration for
constructing tollways at their expense, the operators are allowed to collect government-approved fees from motorists using the
tollways until such operators could fully recover their expenses and earn reasonable returns from their investments.
Tollway operators are, owing to the nature and object of their business, "franchise grantees." The construction, operation, and
maintenance of toll facilities on public improvements are activities of public consequence that necessarily require a special grant of
authority from the state. The term "franchise" has been broadly construed as referring, not only to authorizations that Congress
directly issues in the form of a special law, but also to those granted by administrative agencies to which the power to grant
franchises has been delegated by Congress.
2. NO.
Tollway fees are not taxes. They are not assessed and collected by the BIR and do not go to the general coffers of the government.
What the government seeks to tax here are fees collected from tollways that are constructed, maintained, and operated by private
tollway operators at their own expense under the build, operate, and transfer scheme that the government has adopted for
expressways.
In sum, fees paid by the public to tollway operators for use of the tollways, are not taxes in any sense. A tax is imposed under the
taxing power of the government principally for the purpose of raising revenues to fund public expenditures. Toll fees, on the other
hand, are collected by private tollway operators as reimbursement for the costs and expenses incurred in the construction,
maintenance and operation of the tollways, as well as to assure them a reasonable margin of income. Although toll fees are charged
for the use of public facilities, therefore, they are not government exactions that can be properly treated as a tax. Taxes may be
imposed only by the government under its sovereign authority, toll fees may be demanded by either the government or private
individuals or entities, as an attribute of ownership.
VAT on tollway operations cannot be deemed a tax on tax due to the nature of VAT as an indirect tax. In indirect taxation, a
distinction is made between the liability for the tax and burden of the tax. The seller who is liable for the VAT may shift or pass on
the amount of VAT it paid on goods, properties or services to the buyer. In such a case, what is transferred is not the seller’s liability
but merely the burden of the VAT.
Thus, the seller remains directly and legally liable for payment of the VAT, but the buyer bears its burden since the amount of VAT
paid by the former is added to the selling price.
I. Stages of Taxation
1. Levy
- Objects of Taxation (person, property, privileges)
- Gomez v. Palomar, 25 SCRA 827
FACTS: Petitioner Benjamin Gomez mailed a letter at the post office in San Fernando, Pampanga.
It did not bear the special anti-TB stamp required by the RA 1635. It was returned to the
petitioner. Petitioner now assails the constitutionality of the statute claiming that RA 1635
otherwise known as the Anti-TB Stamp law is violative of the equal protection clause because it
constitutes mail users into a class for the purpose of the tax while leaving untaxed the rest of the
population and that even among postal patrons the statute discriminatorily grants exemptions.
The law in question requires an additional 5 centavo stamp for every mail being posted, and no
mail shall be delivered unless bearing the said stamp.
ISSUE: Is the Anti-TB Stamp Law unconstitutional, for being allegedly violative of the equal
protection clause?
HELD: No. It is settled that the legislature has the inherent power to select the subjects of
taxation and to grant exemptions. This power has aptly been described as "of wide range and
flexibility." Indeed, it is said that in the field of taxation, more than in other areas, the legislature
possesses the greatest freedom in classification. The reason for this is that traditionally,
classification has been a device for fitting tax programs to local needs and usages in order to
achieve an equitable distribution of the tax burden. The classification of mail users is based on
the ability to pay, the enjoyment of a privilege and on administrative convenience. Tax
exemptions have never been thought of as raising revenues under the equal protection
- Lutz v Araneta
FACTS:
Walter Lutz, as Judicial Administrator of the Intestate Estate of Antonio Jayme Ledesma, sought
to recover the sum of
P14,666.40 paid by the estate as taxes from the Commissioner under Section e of
Commonwealth Act 567 or the Sugar Adjustment Act, alleging that such tax is unconstitutional as
it levied for the aid and support of the sugar industry exclusively, which is in his opinion not a
public purpose.
ISSUE:
Is the tax valid?
Page 51 of 113
HELD:
Yes. The tax is levied with a regulatory purpose, i.e. to provide means for the rehabilitation and
stabilization of the threatened sugar industry. The act is primarily an exercise of police power and
is not a pure exercise of taxing power.
As sugar production is one of the great industries of the Philippines and its promotion, protection
and advancement redounds greatly to the general welfare, the legislature found that the general
welfare demanded that the industry should be stabilized, and provided that the distribution of
benefits had to sustain.
Further, it cannot be said that the devotion of tax money to experimental stations to seek
increase of efficiency in sugar production, utilization of by-products, etc., as well as to the
improvement of living and working conditions in sugar mills and plantations without any part of
such money being channeled directly to private persons, constitute expenditure of tax money for
private purposes.
Hence, the tax is valid.
- Gomez v Palomar
FACTS: Petitioner Benjamin Gomez mailed a letter at the post office in San Fernando, Pampanga.
It did not bear the special anti-TB stamp required by the RA 1635. It was returned to the
petitioner. Petitioner now assails the constitutionality of the statute claiming that RA 1635
otherwise known as the Anti-TB Stamp law is violative of the equal protection clause because it
constitutes mail users into a class for the purpose of the tax while leaving untaxed the rest of the
population and that even among postal patrons the statute discriminatorily grants exemptions.
The law in question requires an additional 5 centavo stamp for every mail being posted, and no
mail shall be delivered unless bearing the said stamp.
ISSUE: Is the Anti-TB Stamp Law unconstitutional, for being allegedly violative of the equal
protection clause?
HELD: No. It is settled that the legislature has the inherent power to select the subjects of
taxation and to grant exemptions. This power has aptly been described as "of wide range and
flexibility." Indeed, it is said that in the field of taxation, more than in other areas, the legislature
possesses the greatest freedom in classification. The reason for this is that traditionally,
classification has been a device for fitting tax programs to local needs and usages in order to
achieve an equitable distribution of the tax burden. The classification of mail users is based on
the ability to pay, the enjoyment of a privilege and on administrative convenience. Tax
exemptions have never been thought of as raising revenues under the equal protection
ISSUE: Does the law constitute a class legislation? Is it for the Court to determine which political
unit should impose taxes and which should not?
HELD: No. It is not for the courts to judge what particular cities or municipalities should be
empowered to impose occupation taxes in addition to those imposed by the National
Government. That matter is peculiarly within the domain of the political departments and the
courts would do well not to encroach upon it. Moreover, as the seat of the National Government
and with a population and volume of trade many times that of any other Philippine city or
municipality, Manila, no doubt, offers a more lucrative field for the practice of the professions, so
that it is but fair that the professionals in Manila be made to pay a higher occupation tax than
their brethren in the provinces.
Page 52 of 113
Customs placed the same under custody and refused to give due course [to applications for
registration], unless the aforementioned sums of P483,433 and P494,824 be paid as
compensating tax. The buyers subsequently filed with the CTA their respective petitions for
review. Pending the case, Republic Act No. 3079 amended Republic Act No. 1789 — the Original
Reparations Act, under which the aforementioned contracts with the Buyers had been executed
— by exempting buyers of reparations goods acquired from the Commission, from liability for the
compensating tax.
Invoking [section 20 of the RA 3079], the Buyers applied, for the renovation of their utilizations
contracts with the Commission, which granted the application, and, then, filed with the Tax
Court, their supplemental petitions for review. The CTA ruled in favor of the buyers.
[On appeal, the CIR and COC maintain that such proviso should not be applied retroactively],
upon the ground that a tax exemption must be clear and explicit; that there is no express
provision for the retroactivity of the exemption, established by Republic Act No. 3079, from the
compensating tax; that the favorable provisions, which are referred to in section 20 thereof,
cannot include the exemption from compensating tax; and, that Congress could not have
intended any retroactive exemption, considering that the result thereof would be prejudicial to
the Government.
HELD: YES. The inherent weakness of the last ground becomes manifest when we consider that,
if true, there could be no tax exemption of any kind whatsoever, even if Congress should wish to
create one, because every such exemption implies a waiver of the right to collect what otherwise
would be due to the Government, and, in this sense, is prejudicial thereto. It may not be amiss to
add that no tax exemption — like any other legal exemption or exception — is given without any
reason therefor. In much the same way as other statutory commands, its avowed purpose is
some public benefit or interest, which the law-making body considers sufficient to offset the
monetary loss entitled in the grant of the exemption. Indeed, section 20 of Republic Act No. 3079
exacts a valuable consideration for the retroactivity of its favorable provisions, namely, the
voluntary assumption, by the end-user who bought reparations goods prior to June 17, 1961 of
"all the new obligations provided for in" said Act.
Furthermore, Section 14 of the Law on Reparations, as amended, exempts from the
compensating tax, not particular persons, but persons belonging to a particular class. Indeed,
appellants do not assail the constitutionality of said section 14, insofar as it grants exemptions to
end-users who, after the approval of Republic Act No. 3079, on June 17, 1961, purchased
reparations goods procured by the Commission. From the viewpoint of Constitutional Law,
especially the equal protection clause, there is no difference between the grant of exemption to
said end-users, and the extension of the grant to those whose contracts of purchase and sale
mere made before said date, under Republic Act No. 1789.
FACTS: These two consolidated special civil actions for prohibition challenge, in G.R. No. 109289,
the constitutionality of Republic Act No. 7496, also commonly known as the Simplified Net
Income Taxation Scheme ("SNIT"), amending certain provisions of the National Internal Revenue
Code and, in G.R. No. 109446, the validity of Section 6, Revenue Regulations No. 2-93,
promulgated by public respondents pursuant to said law. Petitioners claim to be taxpayers
adversely affected by the continued implementation of the amendatory legislation. In G.R. No.
109289, it is asserted that the enactment of Republic Act No. 7496 violates the following
provisions of the Constitution: Article VI, Section 26(1) — Every bill passed by the Congress shall
embrace only one subject which shall be expressed in the title thereof. Article VI, Section 28(1)
— The rule of taxation shall be uniform and equitable. The Congress shall evolve a progressive
system of taxation. Article III, Section 1 — No person shall be deprived of . . . property without
due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws. In G.R. No.
109446, petitioners, assailing Section 6 of Revenue Regulations No. 2-93, argue that public
respondents have exceeded their rule-making authority in applying SNIT to general professional
partnerships. The Solicitor General espouses the position taken by public respondents. The Court
Page 53 of 113
has given due course to both petitions. The parties, in compliance with the Court's directive, have
filed their respective memoranda.
ISSUE: Whether public respondents have exceeded their authority in promulgating Section 6,
Revenue Regulations No. 2-93, to carry out Republic Act No. 7496. (NO)
RULING: The questioned regulation reads: Sec. 6. General Professional Partnership — The
general professional partnership (GPP) and the partners comprising the GPP are covered by R. A.
No. 7496. Thus, in determining the net profit of the partnership, only the direct costs mentioned
in said law are to be deducted from partnership income. Also, the expenses paid or incurred by
partners in their individual capacities in the practice of their profession which are not reimbursed
or paid by the partnership but are not considered as direct cost, are not deductible from his gross
income. The Court, first of all, should like to correct the apparent misconception that general
professional partnerships are subject to the payment of income tax or that there is a difference in
the tax treatment between individuals engaged in business or in the practice of their respective
professions and partners in general professional partnerships. The fact of the matter is that a
general professional partnership, unlike an ordinary business partnership (which is treated as a
corporation for income tax purposes and so subject to the corporate income tax), is not itself an
income taxpayer. The income tax is imposed not on the professional partnership, which is tax
exempt, but on the partners themselves in their individual capacity computed on their distributive
shares of partnership profits. Section 23 of the Tax Code, which has not been amended at all by
Republic Act 7496, is explicit: Sec. 23.Tax liability of members of general professional
partnerships. — (a) Persons exercising a common profession in general partnership shall be liable
for income tax only in their individual capacity, and the share in the net profits of the general
professional partnership to which any taxable partner would be entitled whether distributed or
otherwise, shall be returned for taxation and the tax paid in accordance with the provisions of
this Title. (b) In determining his distributive share in the net income of the partnership, each
partner — (1) Shall take into account separately his distributive share of the partnership's
income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit to the extent provided by the pertinent provisions of this
Code, and (2) Shall be deemed to have elected the itemized deductions, unless he declares his
distributive share of the gross income undiminished by his share of the deductions. There is, then
and now, no distinction in income tax liability between a person who practices his profession
alone or individually and one who does it through partnership (whether registered or not) with
others in the exercise of a common profession. Indeed, outside of the gross compensation
income tax and the final tax on passive investment income, under the present income tax system
all individuals deriving income from any source whatsoever are treated in almost invariably the
same manner and under a common set of rules. We can well appreciate the concern taken by
petitioners if perhaps we were to consider Republic Act No. 7496 as an entirely independent, not
merely as an amendatory, piece of legislation. The view can easily become myopic, however,
when the law is understood, as it should be, as only forming part of, and subject to, the whole
income tax concept and precepts long obtaining under the National Internal Revenue Code. To
elaborate a little, the phrase "income taxpayers" is an all embracing term used in the Tax Code,
and it practically covers all persons who derive taxable income. The law, in levying the tax,
adopts the most comprehensive tax situs of nationality and residence of the taxpayer (that
renders citizens, regardless of residence, and resident aliens subject to income tax liability on
their income from all sources) and of the generally accepted and internationally recognized
income taxable base (that can subject non-resident aliens and foreign corporations to income tax
on their income from Philippine sources). In the process, the Code classifies taxpayers into four
main groups, namely: (1) Individuals, (2) Corporations, (3) Estates under Judicial Settlement and
(4) Irrevocable Trusts (irrevocable both as to corpus and as to income). Partnerships are, under
the Code, either "taxable partnerships" or "exempt partnerships."Ordinarily, partnerships, no
matter how created or organized, are subject to income tax (and thus alluded to as "taxable
partnerships") which, for purposes of the above categorization, are by law assimilated to be
within the context of, and so legally contemplated as, corporations. Except for few variances,
such as in the application of the "constructive receipt rule" in the derivation of income, the
income tax approach is alike to both juridical persons. Obviously, SNIT is not intended or
envisioned, as so correctly pointed out in the discussions in Congress during its deliberations on
Republic Act 7496, aforequoted, to cover corporations and partnerships which are independently
subject to the payment of income tax. "Exempt partnerships," upon the other hand, are not
similarly identified as corporations nor even considered as independent taxable entities for
income tax purposes. A general professional partnership is such an example.4 Here, the partners
themselves, not the partnership (although it is still obligated to file an income tax return [mainly
for administration and data]), are liable for the payment of income tax in their individual capacity
computed on their respective and distributive shares of profits. In the determination of the tax
liability, a partner does so as an individual, and there is no choice on the matter. In fine, under
Page 54 of 113
the Tax Code on income taxation, the general professional partnership is deemed to be no more
than a mere mechanism or a flow-through entity in the generation of income by, and the
ultimate distribution of such income to, respectively, each of the individual partners. Section 6 of
Revenue Regulation No. 2-93 did not alter, but merely confirmed, the above standing rule as now
so modified by Republic Act No. 7496 on basically the extent of allowable deductions applicable
to all individual income taxpayers on their non-compensation income. There is no evident
intention of the law, either before or after the amendatory legislation, to place in an unequal
footing or in significant variance the income tax treatment of professionals who practice their
respective professions individually and of those who do it through a general professional
partnership..
2. Assessment
- CIR v. United Salvage and Towage, 729 SCRA 113
It is clear that a taxpayer must be informed in writing of the legal and factual bases of the tax
assessment made against him. The use of the word "shall" in these legal provisions indicates the
mandatory nature of the requirements laid down therein. In the present case, a mere perusal of
the FAN for the deficiency EWT for taxable year 1994 will show that other than a tabulation of
the alleged deficiency taxes due, no further detail regarding the assessment was provided by
petitioner. Only the resulting interest, surcharge and penalty were anchored with legal basis.45
Petitioner should have at least attached a detailed notice of discrepancy or stated an explanation
why the amount of ₱48,461.76 is collectible against respondent46 and how the same was arrived
at. Any short-cuts to the prescribed content of the assessment or the process thereof should not
be countenanced.
Facts: Petitioner found Respondent liable to pay deficiency expanded withholding tax for taxable
year 1994. A mere perusal of the FAN for the deficiency of EWT for 1994 shows that other than a
tabulation of alleged deficiency taxes, no other assessment was provided.
Held:
No. The law requires the legal and factual bases of the assessment be stated in the formal letter
of demand and assessment notice. Such cannot be presumed. The alleged factual bases in the
letter and the audit working papers did not suffice. There was no going around the mandate of
the law.
- Alhambra Cigar and Cig. Mfg. Co. v. Collector, 105 Phil. 1337
FACTS The Alhambra Cigar and Cigarette Manufacturing Co. filed its income tax returns for the
years 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952 and 1953, and paid the income taxes computed in accordance with
said returns. Upon subsequent verification thereof, on November 27, 1954, the Collector of
Internal Revenue assessed and demanded from the company, by way of deficiency taxes for said
years, the sums of P26,369.04, P42,653.00, P61,308.00, P58,404.00 and P51,826.00,
respectively, or the aggregate sum of P240.560.04, plus 5% surcharge and 1% monthly interest
from January 15, 1955. The Company appealed through the CTA and rendered a decision
reducing the deficiency income taxes to P14,458.05, P20,176.00, P27,010.00, P21,759.00 and
P20,201.00, respectively, or a total of P103,604.05.
ISSUE Whether or not the expenses claimed by the company are allowable deductions. (YES)
RULING Under Section 30 of the Tax Code, whenever a controversy arises on the deductibility,
for purposes of income tax, of certain items for alleged compensation of officers of the taxpayer,
two questions become material, namely: (a) Have "personal services" been "actually rendered"
by said officers? (b) In the affirmative case, what is the "reasonable allowance" therefor? When
the Collector disallowed the fees, bonuses and commissions aforementioned, and the company
appealed there from, it became necessary for the lower court to determine whether said officer
had correctly applied section 30 of the Tax Code, and this, in turn, required the consideration of
the two questions already adverted to. In the circumstances surrounding the case, the lower
court has correctly construed and applied said provision.
- CIR v. The Stanley Works Sales (Phils), Inc., 743 SCRA 642
The period to assess and collect deficiency taxes may be extended only upon a written
agreement between the CIR and the taxpayer prior to the expiration of the three-year prescribed
period in accordance with Section 222 (b) of the NIRC. In this case, the Supreme Court upheld
the ruling of the CTA Division that there were infirmities on the Waiver executed by respondent
Page 55 of 113
on 16 November 1993. The Court found that the following requisites were absent: (1) Conformity
of either petitioner or a duly authorized representative; (2) Date of acceptance showing that both
parties had agreed on the Waiver before the expiration of the prescriptive period; and (3) Proof
that respondent was furnished a copy of the Waiver.
FACTS Respondent is a domestic corporation duly organized and existing under Philippine laws
and duly registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. On March 19, 1993, the BIR
issued to Stanley Works a Pre-Assessment Notice No. 002523 for 1989 deficiency income tax. It
was received by the corporation on April 21, 1993. On May 19, 1993, Stanley Works through its
external auditors Punongbayan & Araullo, filed a protest letter and requested reconsideration and
cancellation of the assessment. On November 16, 1993, a certain Mr. John Ang, on behalf of the
corporation, executed a "Waiver of the Defense of Prescription Under the Statute of Limitations
of the National Internal Revenue Code" (Waiver). The Waiver was not signed by Stanley Works
or any of its authorized representatives and did not state the date of acceptance as prescribed
under Revenue Memorandum Order No. 20-90. Under the terms of the Waiver, Stanley Works
waived its right to raise the defense of prescription under Section 223 of the NIRC of 1977
insofar as the assessment and collection of any deficiency taxes for the year ended December 31,
1989, but not after June 30, 1994. On March 4, 2002, Stanley Works submitted a Supplemental
Memorandum alleging that CIR’s right to collect the alleged deficiency income tax has prescribed.
The CTA Division ruled that the request for reconsideration did not suspend the running of the
prescriptive period to collect deficiency income tax. This decision was affirmed by the CTA en
banc. CIR rendered a Decision denying respondent’s request for reconsideration and ordering
respondent to pay the deficiency income tax plus interest that may have accrued. Stanley Works
assailed the decision before the Court of Tax Appeals Division which ordered the cancellation of
the assessment ruling that although the assessment was made within the prescribed period, the
period within which petitioner may collect deficiency income taxes had already lapsed. Upon
appeal, the CTA En Banc affirmed the CTA First Division Decision
ISSUE Whether or not petitioner’s right to collect the deficiency income tax of respondent for
taxable year 1989 has prescribed. (YES)
RULING
The statute of limitations on the right to assess and collect a tax means that once the period
established by law for the assessment and collection of taxes has lapsed, the government’s
corresponding right to enforce that action is barred by provision of law. The period to assess and
collect deficiency taxes may be extended only upon a written agreement between the CIR and
the taxpayer prior to the expiration of the three-year prescribed period in accordance with
Section 222 (b) of the NIRC. Furthermore, jurisprudence is replete with requisites of a valid
waiver: 1. The waiver must be in the proper form prescribed by RMO 20-90. The phrase "but not
after ______ 19 ___", which indicates the expiry date of the period agreed upon to assess/collect
the tax after the regular three-year period of prescription, should be filled up. 2. The waiver must
be signed by the taxpayer himself or his duly authorized representative. In the case of a
corporation, the waiver must be signed by any of its responsible officials. In case the authority is
delegated by the taxpayer to a representative, such delegation should be in writing and duly
notarized. 3. The waiver should be duly notarized. 4. The CIR or the revenue official authorized
by him must sign the waiver indicating that the BIR has accepted and agreed to the waiver. The
date of such acceptance by the BIR should be indicated. However, before signing the waiver, the
CIR or the revenue official authorized by him must make sure that the waiver is in the prescribed
form, duly notarized, and executed by the taxpayer or his duly authorized representative. 5. Both
the date of execution by the taxpayer and date of acceptance by the Bureau should be before
the expiration of the period of prescription or before the lapse of the period agreed upon in case
a subsequent agreement is executed. 6. The waiver must be executed in three copies, the
original copy to be attached to the docket of the case, the second copy for the taxpayer and the
third copy for the Office accepting the waiver. The fact of receipt by the taxpayer of his/her file
copy must be indicated in the original copy to show that the taxpayer was notified of the
acceptance of the BIR and the perfection of the agreement.11 In Philippine Journalist, Inc. v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Court categorically stated that a Waiver must strictly
conform to RMO No. 20-90. The mandatory nature of the requirements set forth in RMO No. 20-
90, as ruled upon by this Court, was recognized by the BIR itself in the latter’s subsequent
issuances, namely, Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) Nos. 6-200513 and 29- 2012.14 Thus,
the BIR cannot claim the benefits of extending the period to collect the deficiency tax as a
consequence of the Waiver when, in truth it was the BIR’s inaction which is the proximate cause
of the defects of the Waiver. The BIR has the burden of ensuring compliance with the
requirements of RMO No. 20-90, as they have the burden of securing the right of the
government to assess and collect tax deficiencies. This right would prescribe absent any showing
Page 56 of 113
of a valid extension of the period set by the law. To emphasize, the Waiver was not a unilateral
act of the taxpayer; hence, the BIR must act on it, either by conforming to or by disagreeing with
the extension. A waiver of the statute of limitations, whether on assessment or collection, should
not be construed asa waiver of the right to invoke the defense of prescription but, rather, an
agreement between the taxpayer and the BIR to extend the period to a date certain, within
which the latter could still assess or collect taxes due. The waiver does not imply that the
taxpayer relinquishes the right to invoke prescription unequivocally. Although we recognize that
the power of taxation is deemed inherent in order to support the government, tax provisions are
not all about raising revenue. Our legislature has provided safeguards and remedies beneficial to
both the taxpayer, to protect against abuse; and the government, to promptly act for the
availability and recovery of revenues. A statute of limitations on the assessment and collection of
internal revenue taxes was adopted to serve a purpose that would benefit both the taxpayer and
the government. This Court has expounded on the significance of adopting a statute of limitation
on tax assessment and collection in this case:The provision of law on prescription was adopted in
our statute books upon recommendation of the tax commissioner of the Philippines which
declares: Under the former law, the right of the Government to collect the tax does not prescribe.
However, in fairness to the taxpayer, the Government should be estopped from collecting the tax
where it failed to make the necessary investigation and assessment within 5 years after the filing
of the return and where it failed to collect the tax within 5 years from the date of assessment
thereof. Just as the government is interested in the stability of its collection, so alsoare the
taxpayers entitled to an assurance that they will not be subjected to further investigation for tax
purposes after the expiration of a reasonable period of time. (Vol. II, Report of the Tax
Commission of the Philippines, pp. 321-322) The law prescribing a limitation of actions for the
collection of the income tax is beneficial both to the Government and to its citizens; to the
Government because tax officers would be obliged to act promptly in the making of assessment,
and to citizens because after the lapse of the period of prescription citizens would havea feeling
of security against unscrupulous tax agents who will always find an excuse to inspect the books
of taxpayers, not to determine the latter's real liability, but to take advantage of every
opportunity to molest peaceful, law-abiding citizens. Without such legal defense taxpayers would
furthermore be under obligation to always keep their books and keep them open for inspection
subject to harassment by unscrupulous tax agents. The law on prescription being a remedial
measure should be interpreted in a way conducive to bringing about the beneficient purpose of
affording protection to the taxpayer within the contemplation of the Commission which
recommends the approval of the law
FACTS
BIR Examiner Ben Garcia examined the income tax returns filed by petitioner, Quirico P. Ungab,
for
the calendar year ending December 31, 1973. In the course of his examination, he discovered
that
the petitioner failed to report his income derived from sales of banana saplings. As a result, the
BIR
District Revenue Officer at Davao City sent a "Notice of Taxpayer" to the petitioner informing him
that there is due from him (petitioner) the amount of P104,980.81, representing income,
business
tax and forest charges for the year 1973 and inviting petitioner to an informal conference where
the
petitioner, duly assisted by counsel, may present his objections to the findings of the BIR
Examiner.
Page 57 of 113
Upon receipt of the notice, the petitioner wrote the BIR District Revenue Officer protesting the
assessment, claiming that he was only a dealer or agent on commission basis in the banana
sapling
business and that his income, as reported in his income tax returns for the said year, was
accurately
stated. BIR Examiner Ben Garcia, however, was fully convinced that the petitioner had filed a
fraudulent income tax return so that he submitted a "Fraud Referral Report," to the Tax Fraud
Unit
of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. After examining the records of the case, the Special
Investigation
Division of the Bureau of Internal Revenue found sufficient proof that the herein petitioner is
guilty
of tax evasion for the taxable year 1973. In a second indorsement to the Chief of the Prosecution
Division, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue approved the prosecution of the petitioner.
Thereafter, State Prosecutor Jesus Acebes who had been designated to assist all Provincial and
City Fiscals throughout the Philippines in the investigation and prosecution, if the evidence
warrants, of all violations of the National Internal Revenue Code, as amended, and other related
laws, in Administrative Order No. 116 dated December 5, 1974, and to whom the case was
assigned, conducted a preliminary investigation of the case, and finding probable cause, filed six
(6) informations against the petitioner with the Court of First Instance of Davao City. petitioner
filed a motion to quash the informations upon the grounds that: (1) the informations are null and
void for want of authority on the part of the State Prosecutor to initiate and prosecute the said
cases; and (2) the trial court has no jurisdiction to take cognizance of the above-entitled cases in
view of his pending protest against the assessment made by the BIR Examiner. However, the
trial court denied the motion.
ISSUE Whether the filing of the informations was precipitate and premature since the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue has not yet resolved petitioner’s protests against the
assessment of the Revenue District Officer. (NO)
RULING The contention is without merit. What is involved here is not the collection of taxes
where the assessment of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue may be reviewed by the Court of
Tax Appeals, but a criminal prosecution for violations of the National Internal Revenue Code
which is within the cognizance of courts of first instance. While there can be no civil action to
enforce collection before the assessment procedures provided in the Code have been followed,
there is no requirement for the precise computation and assessment of the tax before there can
be a criminal prosecution under the Code. The contention is made, and is here rejected, that an
assessment of the deficiency tax due is necessary before the taxpayer can be prosecuted
criminally for the charges preferred. The crime is complete when the violator has, as in this case,
knowingly and willfully filed fraudulent returns with intent to evade and defeat a part or all of the
tax. An assessment of a deficiency is not necessary to a criminal prosecution for willful attempt to
defeat and evade the income tax. A crime is complete when the violator has knowingly and
willfuly filed a fraudulent return with intent to evade and defeat the tax. The perpetration of the
crime is grounded upon knowledge on the part of the taxpayer that he has made an inaccurate
return, and the government's failure to discover the error and promptly to assess has no
connections with the commission of the crime. Besides, it has been ruled that a petition for
reconsideration of an assessment may affect the suspension of the prescriptive period for the
collection of taxes, but not the prescriptive period of a criminal action for violation of law.
Obviously, the protest of the petitioner against the assessment of the District Revenue Officer
cannot stop his prosecution for violation of the National Internal Revenue Code. Accordingly, the
respondent Judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the motion to quash filed by the
petitioner.
Page 58 of 113
before the Department of Justice against the PRDC, its President Rogelio A. Dio, and its
Treasurer Virginia S. Dio, alleging evasion of taxes in the total amount of P10,513,671 .00.
Private respondents PRDC, et. al. filed an Urgent Request for Reconsideration/Reinvestigation
disputing the tax assessment and tax liability. Subsequently, private respondents received a
subpoena from the DOJ in connection with the criminal complaint filed by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue (BIR) against them. The CIR denied the urgent request for
reconsideration/reinvestigation of the private respondents on the ground that no formal
assessment of the has as yet been issued by the Commissioner. Private respondents then
elevated the Decision of the CIR to the Court of Tax Appeals on a petition for review, to which
the CIR sough to dismiss on the ground that the CTA has no jurisdiction over the subject matter
of the petition, as there was no formal assessment issued against the petitioners. The CTA
denied the said motion to dismiss and ordered the CIR to file an answer but did not file an
answer nor did she move to reconsider the resolution. Instead, the CIR filed before the Court of
Appeals a petition alleging that respondent Court of Tax Appeals acted with grave abuse of
discretion and without jurisdiction in considering the affidavit/report of the revenue officer and
the indorsement of said report to the secretary of justice as assessment which may be appealed
to the Court of Tax Appeals. The CA sustained the CTA and dismissed the petition.
ISSUES 1. Whether the revenue officers' Affidavit-Report, which was attached to criminal revenue
Complaint filed the Department of Justice, constituted an assessment that could be questioned
before the Court of Tax Appeals. (NO) 2. Whether an assessment is necessary before filing of
criminal complaint. (NO)
RULING 1. Neither the NIRC nor the regulations governing the protest of assessments provide a
specific definition or form of an assessment. However, the NIRC defines the specific functions
and effects of an assessment. To consider the affidavit attached to the Complaint as a proper
assessment is to subvert the nature of an assessment and to set a bad precedent that will
prejudice innocent taxpayers. True, as pointed out by the private respondents, an assessment
informs the taxpayer that he or she has tax liabilities. But not all documents coming from the BIR
containing a computation of the tax liability can be deemed assessments. To start with, an
assessment must be sent to and received by a taxpayer, and must demand payment of the taxes
described therein within a specific period. Thus, the NIRC imposes a 25 percent penalty, in
addition to the tax due, in case the taxpayer fails to pay deficiency tax within the time prescribed
for its payment in the notice of assessment. Likewise, an interest of 20 percent per annum, or
such higher rates as may be prescribed by rules and regulations, is to be collected form the date
prescribed for its payment until the full payment.The issuance of an assessment is vital in
determining, the period of limitation regarding its proper issuance and the period within which to
protest it. Section 203 of the NIRC provides that internal revenue taxes must be assessed within
three years from the last day within which to file the return. Section 222, on the other hand,
specifies a period of ten years in case a fraudulent return with intent to evade was submitted or
in case of failure to file a return. Also, Section 228 of the same law states that said assessment
may be protested only within thirty days from receipt thereof. Necessarily, the taxpayer must be
certain that a specific document constitutes an assessment. Otherwise, confusion would arise
regarding the period within which to make an assessment or to protest the same, or whether
interest and penalty may accrue thereon. It should also be stressed that the said document is a
notice duly sent to the taxpayer. Indeed, an assessment is deemed made only when the collector
of internal revenue releases, mails or sends such notice to the taxpayer. In the present case, the
revenue officers' Affidavit merely contained a computation of respondents' tax liability. It did not
state a demand or a period for payment. Worse, it was addressed to the justice secretary, not to
the taxpayers. The fact that the Complaint itself was specifically directed and sent to the
Department of Justice and not to private respondents shows that the intent of the commissioner
was to file a criminal complaint for tax evasion, not to issue an assessment. Although the
revenue officers recommended the issuance of an assessment, the commissioner opted instead
to file a criminal case for tax evasion. What private respondents received was a notice from the
DOJ that a criminal case for tax evasion had been filed against them, not a notice that the
Bureau of Internal Revenue had made an assessment. In addition, what private respondents sent
to the commissioner was a motion for a reconsideration of the tax evasion charges filed, not of
an assessment, as shown thus: This is to request for reconsideration of the tax evasion charges
against my client, PASCOR Realty and Development Corporation and for the same to be referred
to the Appellate Division in order to give my client the opportunity of a fair and objective hearing.
Page 59 of 113
1977 NIRC, as amended, does not include mere photocopies of records/documents. In this case,
petitioner anchored the assessment on mere machine copies of records/documents. Mere
photocopies of the Consumption Entries have no probative weight if offered as proof of the
contents thereof. The reason for this is that such copies are mere scraps of paper and are of no
probative value as basis for any deficiency income or business taxes against a taxpayer
FACTS The respondent is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the
Philippines. Being engaged in the sale of plastic products, it imports synthetic resin and other
chemicals for the manufacture of its products. For this purpose, it is required to file an Import
Entry and Internal Revenue Declaration (Consumption Entry) with the Bureau of Customs under
Section 1301 of the Tariff and Customs Code. Sometime in 1989, Hantex was subjected to an
audit and investigation after the Intelligence and Investigation Bureau (EIIB)received a
confidential information that the respondent had imported synthetic resin amounting to
P115,599,018.00 but only declared P45,538,694.57. According to the informer, based on
photocopies of 77 Consumption Entries furnished by another informer, the 1987 importations of
the respondent were understated in its accounting records. Subpoena duces tecum and ad
testificandum were also issued for the president and general manager of the respondent to
appear in a hearing and bring the records of the company. However, the respondent's president
and general manager refused to comply with the subpoena, contending that its books of
accounts and records of importation of synthetic resin and calcium bicarbonate had been
investigated repeatedly by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) on prior occasions. Meanwhile,
the Bureau of Customs could not authenticate the machine copies of the import entries as well,
since the original copies of the said entries filed with the Bureau of Customs had apparently been
eaten by termites. However, he issued a certification that the following enumerated entries were
filed by the respondent which were processed and released from the Port of Manila after
payment of duties and taxes. The IEIIB then conducted an investigation and relied on the
certified copies of the respondent's Profit and Loss Statement for 1987 and 1988 on file with the
SEC, the machine copies of the Consumption Entries, Series of 1987, submitted by the informer,
as well as excerpts from the entries certified by the Bureau of Customs.EIIB Commissioner
Almonte transmitted the entire docket of the case to the BIR and recommended the collection of
the total tax assessment from the respondent. Thereafter, the petitioner, CIR, sent a Letter dated
to the respondent demanding payment of its deficiency income tax of P13,414,226.40 and
deficiency sales tax of P14,752,903.25, inclusive of surcharge and interest. However, respondent
wrote to the CIR protesting the assessment. The respondent questioned the assessment on the
ground that the EIIB representative failed to present the original, or authenticated, or duly
certified copies of the Consumption and Import Entry Accounts, or excerpts thereof if the original
copies were not readily available; or, if the originals were in the official custody of a public
officer, certified copies thereof. The respondent requested anew that the income tax deficiency
assessment and the sales tax deficiency assessment be set aside for lack of factual and legal
basis. The CIR denied the letter-request for the dismissal of the assessments. The respondent
forthwith filed a Petition for Review in the CTA of the Commissioner's Final Assessment Letter to
which the CTA ruled deniying the petition and ordered Hantex to pay its deficiency income and
sales taxes for the year 1987. On appeal, the CA granted the petition and reversed the decision
of the CTA. The CA held that the income and sales tax deficiency assessments issued by the
petitioner were unlawful and baseless since the copies of the import entries relied upon in
computing the deficiency tax of the respondent were not duly authenticated by the public officer
charged with their custody, nor verified under oath by the EIIB and the BIR investigators.
ISSUE Whether the December 10, 1991 final assessment of the petitioner against the respondent
for deficiency income tax and sales tax for the latter's 1987 importation of resins and calcium
bicarbonate is based on competent evidence and the law. (NO)
RULING Section 16 of the NIRC of 1977, as amended, which provides that the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue has the power to make assessments and prescribe additional requirements for
tax administration and enforcement. Among such powers are those provided in paragraph (b)
thereof, which states: (b) Failure to submit required returns, statements, reports and other
documents. 'When a report required by law as a basis for the assessment of any national internal
revenue tax shall not be forthcoming within the time fixed by law or regulation or when there is
reason to believe that any such report is false, incomplete or erroneous, the Commissioner shall
assess the proper tax on the best evidence obtainable. However, the best evidence obtainable
under Section 16 of the 1977 NIRC, as amended, does not include mere photocopies of
records/documents. The petitioner, in making a preliminary and final tax deficiency assessment
against a taxpayer, cannot anchor the said assessment on mere machine copies of
records/documents. Mere photocopies of the Consumption Entries have no probative weight if
offered as proof of the contents thereof. The reason for this is that such copies are mere scraps
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of paper and are of no probative value as basis for any deficiency income or business taxes
against a taxpayer. Indeed, in United States v. Davey, the U.S. Court of Appeals (2nd Circuit)
ruled that where the accuracy of a taxpayer's return is being checked, the government is entitled
to use the original records rather than be forced to accept purported copies which present the
risk of error or tampering. In Collector of Internal Revenue v. Benipayo, the Court ruled that the
assessment must be based on actual facts. The rule assumes more importance in this case since
the xerox copies of the Consumption Entries furnished by the informer of the EIIB were furnished
by yet another informer. While the EIIB tried to secure certified copies of the said entries from
the Bureau of Customs, it was unable to do so because the said entries were allegedly eaten by
termites. The Court can only surmise why the EIIB or the BIR, for that matter, failed to secure
certified copies of the said entries from the Tariff and Customs Commission or from the National
Statistics Office which also had copies thereof. It bears stressing that under Section 1306 of the
Tariff and Customs Code, the Consumption Entries shall be the required number of copies as
prescribed by regulations.76 The Consumption Entry is accomplished in sextuplicate copies and
quadruplicate copies in other places. In Manila, the six copies are distributed to the Bureau of
Customs, the Tariff and Customs Commission, the Declarant (Importer), the Terminal Operator,
and the Bureau of Internal Revenue. Inexplicably, the Commissioner and the BIR personnel
ignored the copy of the Consumption Entries filed with the BIR and relied on the photocopies
supplied by the informer of the EIIB who secured the same from another informer. The BIR, in
preparing and issuing its preliminary and final assessments against the respondent, even ignored
the records on the investigation made by the District Revenue officers on the respondent's
importations for 1987. The original copies of the Consumption Entries were of prime importance
to the BIR. This is so because such entries are under oath and are presumed to be true and
correct under penalty of falsification or perjury. Admissions in the said entries of the importers'
documents are admissions against interest and presumptively correct. In fine, then, the petitioner
acted arbitrarily and capriciously in relying on and giving weight to the machine copies of the
Consumption Entries in fixing the tax deficiency assessments against the respondent. The rule is
that in the absence of the accounting records of a taxpayer, his tax liability may be determined
by estimation. The petitioner is not required to compute such tax liabilities with mathematical
exactness. Approximation in the calculation of the taxes due is justified. To hold otherwise would
be tantamount to holding that skillful concealment is an invincible barrier to proof. However, the
rule does not apply where the estimation is arrived at arbitrarily and capriciously. As a general
rule, tax assessments by tax examiners are presumed correct and made in good faith. All
presumptions are in favor of the correctness of a tax assessment. It is to be presumed, however,
that such assessment was based on sufficient evidence. Upon the introduction of the assessment
in evidence, a prima facie case of liability on the part of the taxpayer is made. If a taxpayer files
a Petition for Review in the CTA and assails the assessment, the prima facie presumption is that
the assessment made by the BIR is correct, and that in preparing the same, the BIR personnel
regularly performed their duties. This rule for tax initiated suits is premised on several factors
other than the normal evidentiary rule imposing proof obligation on the petitioner-taxpayer: the
presumption of administrative regularity; the likelihood that the taxpayer will have access to the
relevant information; and the desirability of bolstering the record-keeping requirements of the
NIRC. However, the prima facie correctness of a tax assessment does not apply upon proof that
an assessment is utterly without foundation, meaning it is arbitrary and capricious. Where the
BIR has come out with a "naked assessment," i.e., without any foundation character, the
determination of the tax due is without rational basis. In such a situation, the U.S. Court of
Appeals ruled that the determination of the Commissioner contained in a deficiency notice
disappears. Hence, the determination by the CTA must rest on all the evidence introduced and its
ultimate determination must find support in credible evidence.
FACTS In two notices dated October 28, 1988, petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue
(CIR) assessed respondent Bank of the Philippine Islands’ (BPI’s) deficiency percentage and
documentary stamp taxes for the year 1986 in the total amount of ₱129,488,656.63. On July 6,
1991, BPI requested a reconsideration of the assessments stated in the CIR’s letter but was
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denied. On February 18, 1992, BPI filed a petition for review in the CTA. In a decision, the CTA
dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction since the subject assessments had become final and
unappealable. The CTA ruled that BPI failed to protest on time under Section 270 of the National
Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) of 1986 and Section 7 in relation to Section 11 of RA 1125. It also
denied reconsideration. On appeal, the CA reversed the tax court’s decision and resolution and
remanded the case to the CTA for a decision on the merits. It ruled that the notices were not
valid assessments because they did not inform the taxpayer of the legal and factual bases
therefor. It declared that the proper assessments were those contained in the May 8, 1991 letter
which provided the reasons for the claimed deficiencies. Thus, it held that BPI filed the petition
for review in the CTA on time. The CIR elevated the case to this Court.
ISSUE Whether or not the assessments issued to BPI for deficiency percentage and documentary
stamp taxes for 1986 had already become final and unappealable. (YES)
RULING The present Section 228 of the NIRC provides: Sec. 228. Protesting of Assessment. —
When the [CIR] or his duly authorized representative finds that proper taxes should be assessed,
he shall first notify the taxpayer of his findings: Provided, however, That a preassessment notice
shall not be required in the following cases: xxx xxx xxx The taxpayer shall be informed in writing
of the law and the facts on which the assessment is made; otherwise, the assessment shall be
void. xxx xxx xxx (emphasis supplied) The sentence “[t]he taxpayers shall be informed in writing
of the law and the facts on which the assessment is made; otherwise, the assessment shall be
void” was not in the old Section 270 but was only later on inserted in the renumbered Section
228 in 1997. Evidently, the legislature saw the need to modify the former Section 270 by
inserting the aforequoted sentence. The fact that the amendment was necessary showed that,
prior to the introduction of the amendment, the statute had an entirely different meaning.
Indeed, the underlying reason for the law was the basic constitutional requirement that "no
person shall be deprived of his property without due process of law." The Supreme Court
however, noted what the CTA had to say: xxx xxx xxx From the foregoing testimony, it can be
safely adduced that not only was [BPI] given the opportunity to discuss with the [CIR] when the
latter issued the former a Pre-Assessment Notice (which [BPI] ignored) but that the examiners
themselves went to [BPI] and "we talk to them and we try to [thresh] out the issues, present
evidences as to what they need." Now, how can [BPI] and/or its counsel honestly tell this Court
that they did not know anything about the assessments? Not only that. To further buttress the
fact that [BPI] indeed knew beforehand the assessments[,] contrary to the allegations of its
counsel[,] was the testimony of Mr. Jerry Lazaro, Assistant Manager of the Accounting
Department of [BPI]. He testified to the fact that he prepared worksheets which contain his
analysis regarding the findings of the [CIR’s] examiner, Mr. San Pedro and that the same
worksheets were presented to Mr. Carlos Tan, Comptroller of [BPI]. xxx xxx xxx From all the
foregoing discussions, the Court conclueded that [BPI] was indeed aware of the nature and basis
of the assessments, and was given all the opportunity to contest the same but ignored it despite
the notice conspicuously written on the assessments which states that "this ASSESSMENT
becomes final and unappealable if not protested within 30 days after receipt." Counsel resorted
to dilatory tactics and dangerously played with time. Unfortunately, such strategy proved fatal to
the cause of his client. The CA never disputed these findings of fact by the CTA: [T]his Court
recognizes that the [CTA], which by the very nature of its function is dedicated exclusively to the
consideration of tax problems, has necessarily developed an expertise on the subject, and its
conclusions will not be overturned unless there has been an abuse or improvident exercise of
authority. Such findings can only be disturbed on appeal if they are not supported by substantial
evidence or there is a showing of gross error or abuse on the part of the [CTA]. Under the former
Section 270, there were two instances when an assessment became final and unappealable: (1)
when it was not protested within 30 days from receipt and (2) when the adverse decision on the
protest was not appealed to the CTA within 30 days from receipt of the final decision: Sec. 270.
Protesting of assessment. xxx xxx xxx Such assessment may be protested administratively by
filing a request for reconsideration or reinvestigation in such form and manner as may be
prescribed by the implementing regulations within thirty (30) days from receipt of the
assessment; otherwise, the assessment shall become final and unappealable. If the protest is
denied in whole or in part, the individual, association or corporation adversely affected by the
decision on the protest may appeal to the [CTA] within thirty (30) days from receipt of the said
decision; otherwise, the decision shall become final, executory and demandable. Implications Of
A Valid Assessment Considering that the October 28, 1988 notices were valid assessments, BPI
should have protested the same within 30 days from receipt thereof. The December 10, 1988
reply it sent to the CIR did not qualify as a protest since the letter itself stated that "[a]s soon as
this is explained and clarified in a proper letter of assessment, we shall inform you of the
taxpayer’s decision on whether to pay or protest the assessment." Hence, by its own declaration,
BPI did not regard this letter as a protest against the assessments. As a matter of fact, BPI never
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deemed this a protest since it did not even consider the October 28, 1988 notices as valid or
proper assessments. The inevitable conclusion is that BPI’s failure to protest the assessments
within the 30-day period provided in the former Section 270 meant that they became final and
unappealable. Thus, the CTA correctly dismissed BPI’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. BPI was,
from then on, barred from disputing the correctness of the assessments or invoking any defense
that would reopen the question of its liability on the merits. Not only that. There arose a
presumption of correctness when BPI failed to protest the assessments: Tax assessments by tax
examiners are presumed correct and made in good faith. The taxpayer has the duty to prove
otherwise. In the absence of proof of any irregularities in the performance of duties, an
assessment duly made by a Bureau of Internal Revenue examiner and approved by his superior
officers will not be disturbed. All presumptions are in favor of the correctness of tax assessments.
3. Payment
- First Lepanto Taisho v. CIR, 695 SCRA 639
Facts
First Lepanto Taisho Insurance Corporation (“petitioner”) is a Large Taxpayer under Revenue
Regulations No. 6-85, as amended. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“respondent”) sent a
Letter of Authority to petitioner to examine their books of account for the year 1997 and other
unverified years. On December 29, 1999, the respondent issued tax assessments for deficiency
income, withholding, expanded withholding, final withholding, value-added, and documentary
taxes for the year 1997. The petitioner protested such assessment, which it partially withdrew in
view of the tax amnesty program it had availed. The CTA ordered the petitioner to pay P
1,994,390.86 as deficiency withholding tax on compensation, expanded withholding tax, and final
tax. The petitioner appealed to the CTA En Banc which affirmed the decision of the CTA Division.
The CTA rejected the contention of the petitioner that it is not liable to pay withholding tax on
compensation to some of its directors since they were not employees and they had already been
subjected to expanded withholding tax. As to the petitioner’s transportation, subsistence and
lodging, and representation allowance, the CTA En Banc ruled that the petitioner failed to prove
that those were actual expenses. As to deficiency expanded withholding taxes on compensation,
petitioner failed to substantiate that the commissions earned came from reinsurance activities
and should not be subject to withholding tax. As to deficiency final withholding taxes, petitioner
failed to present proof of remittance to establish that it had remitted the final tax on dividends
paid as well as the payments for services rendered by a Malaysian company. As to the imposition
of delinquency interest, records reveal that petitioner failed to pay the deficiency taxes within
thirty (30) days from receipt of the demand letter, thus, delinquency interest accrued from such
non-payment.
Issue
Ruling
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II.Deficiency expanded withholding taxes on transportation, subsistence and lodging, and
representation expense; commission expense; direct loss expense; occupancy cost; and
service/contractor and purchases
As to the deficiency withholding tax assessment on transportation, subsistence and lodging, and
representation expense, commission expense, direct loss expense, occupancy cost,
service/contractor and purchases, the petitioner was not able to sufficiently establish that the
transportation expenses reflected in their books were reimbursement from actual transportation
expenses incurred by its employees in connection with their duties as the only document
presented was a Schedule of Transportation Expenses without pertinent supporting documents.
Without said documents, such as but not limited to, receipts, transportation-related vouchers
and/or invoices, there is no way of ascertaining whether the amounts reflected in the schedule of
expenses were disbursed for transportation.
With regard to commission expense, no additional documentary evidence, like the reinsurance
agreements contracts, was presented to support petitioner’s allegation that the expenditure
originated from reinsurance activities that gave rise to reinsurance commissions, not subject to
withholding tax. As to occupancy costs, records reveal that petitioner failed to compute the
correct total occupancy cost that should be subjected to withholding tax, hence, petitioner is
liable for the deficiency.
As to service/contractors and purchases, petitioner contends that both parties already stipulated
that it correctly withheld the taxes due. Stipulations cannot defeat the right of the State to collect
the correct taxes due on an individual or juridical person because taxes are the lifeblood of our
nation so its collection should be actively pursued without unnecessary impediment.
III.Deficiency final withholding taxes on payment of dividends and computerization expenses to
foreign entities
As to the deficiency final withholding tax assessments for payments of dividends and
computerization expenses incurred by petitioner to foreign entities, particularly Matsui Marine &
Fire Insurance Co. Ltd. (Matsui), the Court agrees with CIR that petitioner failed to present
evidence to show the supposed remittance to Matsui.
IV.Delinquency interest under Section 249 (c) (3) of the NIRC
The Court likewise holds the imposition of delinquency interest under Section 249 (c) (3) of the
1997 NIRC to be proper, because failure to pay the deficiency tax assessed within the time
prescribed for its payment justifies the imposition of interest at the rate of twenty percent (20%)
per annum, which interest shall be assessed and collected from the date prescribed for its
payment until full payment is made.
It is worthy to note that tax revenue statutes are not generally intended to be liberally construed.
Moreover, the CTA being a highly specialized court .particularly created for the purpose of
reviewing tax and customs cases, it is settled that its findings and conclusions are accorded great
respect and are generally upheld by this Court, unless there is a clear showing of a reversible
error or an improvident exercise of authority. Absent such errors, the challenged decision should
be maintained.
J. Doctrines in Taxation
FACTS Respondent is an employee of Intel Manufacturing Phils., Inc. (Intel). For the period
January 1, 1996 to December 31, 1996, respondent was assigned in a foreign country. During
that period, Intel withheld the taxes due on respondent’s compensation income and remitted to
the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). Claiming that the income taxes withheld and paid by Intel
and respondent resulted in an overpayment of P340,918.92,4 respondent a petition for review
with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) moved to
dismiss the petition for failure of respondent to file the mandatory written claim for refund before
the CIR. In its Resolution, the CTA dismissed respondent’s petition. For one, the CTA ruled that
respondent failed to file a written claim for refund with the CIR, a condition precedent to the
filing of a petition for review before the CTA. Second, the CTA noted that respondent’s omission,
inadvertently or otherwise, to allege in her petition the date of filing the final adjustment return,
deprived the court of its jurisdiction over the subject matter of the case. Upon review, the Court
of Appeals reversed the CTA and directed the latter to resolve respondent’s petition for review.
Page 64 of 113
Applying Section 204(c)8 of the 1997 National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), the Court of
Appeals ruled that respondent’s filing of an amended return indicating an overpayment was
sufficient compliance with the requirement of a written claim for refund. Petitioner sought
reconsideration, but it was denied.
ISSUE Whether the 1997 Tax Reform Act can be applied retroactively. (NO)
RULING The issue on the retroactivity of Section 204(c) of the 1997 NIRC arose because the last
paragraph of Section 204(c) was not found in Section 230 of the old Code. After a thorough
consideration of this matter, we find that we cannot give retroactive application to Section 204(c)
above cited. We have to stress that tax laws are prospective in operation, unless the language of
the statute clearly provides otherwise. Moreover, it should be emphasized that a party seeking an
administrative remedy must not merely initiate the prescribed administrative procedure to obtain
relief, but also pursue it to its appropriate conclusion before seeking judicial intervention in order
to give the administrative agency an opportunity to decide the matter itself correctly and prevent
unnecessary and premature resort to court action. This the respondent did not follow through.
Additionally, it could not escape notice that at the time respondent filed her amended return, the
1997 NIRC was not yet in effect. Hence, respondent had no reason at that time to think that the
filing of an amended return would constitute the written claim for refund required by applicable
law. Furthermore, as the CTA stressed, even the date of filing of the Final Adjustment Return was
omitted, inadvertently or otherwise, by respondent in her petition for review. This omission was
fatal to respondent’s claim, for it deprived the CTA of its jurisdiction over the subject matter of
the case. Finally, we cannot agree with the Court of Appeals’ finding that the nature of the
instant case calls for the application of remedial laws. Revenue statutes are substantive laws and
in no sense must their application be equated with that of remedial laws. As well said in a prior
case, revenue laws are not intended to be liberally construed. Considering that taxes are the
lifeblood of the government and in Holmes’s memorable metaphor, the price we pay for
civilization, tax laws must be faithfully and strictly implemented.
Issue:
Whether or not the imposition of the 3% ad valorem tax on importations is valid.
Held:
No. EO 860 which was the basis for the imposition of the ad valorem duty took effect December
1982. The importations were effected in 1978 and 1979 by NIA. It is a cardinal rule that laws
shall have no retroactive effect unless contrary is provided. EO 860 does not provide for its
retroactivity. The Deputy Minister of Finance even clarified that letters of credit opened prior to
the effectivity of EO 860 are not subject to its provisions.
In the case, the procurement of the equipment was not on a tax exempt basis as the import
liabilities have been secured to paid under a financial scheme. It is a matter of implementing a
pre-existing agreement, hence, the imported articles can only be subject to the rates of import
duties prevailing at the time of entry or withdrawal from the customs’ custody.
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be tantamount to giving it (Rep. Act No. 2343) retroactive application. [It further contends that]
the application of the amended provision (now Sec. 51-d of the Tax Code) to the cases at bar
would run counter to the constitutional restriction against the enactment of ex post facto laws.
HELD: NO – [the interest was correctly imposed]. It is to be noted that the collection of interest
in these cases is not penal in nature, thus —
the imposition of . . . interest is but a just compensation to the state for the delay in paying the
tax, and for the concomitant use by the taxpayer of funds that rightfully should be in the
government's hands (U.S. vs. Goldstein, 189 F [2d] 752; Ross vs. U.S., 148 Fed. Supp. 330; U.S.
vs. Joffray, 97 Fed. [2d] 488). The fact that the interest charged is made proportionate to the
period of delay constitutes the best evidence that such interest is not penal but compensatory.
(Castro vs. Collector of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. L-12174, Resolution on Motion for
Reconsideration, December 28, 1962)
and we had already held that —
The doctrine of unconstitutionality raised by appellant is based on the prohibition against ex post
facto laws. But this prohibition applies only to criminal or penal matters, and not to laws which
concern civil matters or proceedings generally, or which affect or regulate civil or private rights
(Ex parte Garland, 18 Law Ed., 366; 16 C.J.S., 889-891). (Republic vs. Oasan Vda. de Fernandez,
99 Phil. 934, 937).
Finally, section 13 of the amendatory Republic Act No. 2343 refers only to the basic tax rates,
which are made applicable to income received in 1959 onward, but does not affect the interest
due on deficiencies, which are left to be governed by section 51 (d).
Issue/s:
1. Whether or not the provisions of Act No. 3606 (Tax Law) which is favorable to the taxpayer be
given retroactive effect?
Held and Reasoning: No. The respondent levied and assessed the inheritance tax collected from
the petitioner under the provisions of section 1544 of the Revised Administrative Code as
amended by Act No. 3606. However, the latter only enacted in 1930 – not the law in force when
the testator died in 1922. Laws cannot be applied retroactively. The Court states that it is a well-
settled principle that inheritance taxation is governed by the statue in force at the time of the
death of the decendent. The Court also emphasized that “a statute should be considered as
prospective in its operation, unless the language of the statute clearly demands or expresses that
it shall have retroactive effect…” Act No. 3606 does not contain any provisions indicating a
legislative intent to give it a retroactive effect. Therefore, the provisions of Act No. 3606 cannot
be applied to the case at bar.
Page 66 of 113
in relation to the subject sales of gold. It then filed applications for tax refunds/credits
corresponding to input VAT. However, such request was not granted due to BIR VAT Ruling No.
008-92 dated 23 January 1992 that was issued subsequent to the consummation of the subject
sales of gold to the Central Ban`k which provides that sales of gold to the Central Bank shall not
be considered as export sales and thus, shall be subject to 10% VAT. BIR VAT Ruling No. 008-92
withdrew, modified, and superseded all inconsistent BIR issuances. Both petitioner and Benguet
agree that the retroactive application of VAT Ruling No. 008-92 is valid only if such application
would not be prejudicial to the Benguet pursuant Sec. 246 of the NIRC.
Issues: (1) WON Benguet’s sale of gold to the Central Bank during the period when such was
classified by BIR issuances as zerorated could be taxed validly at a 10% rate after the
consummation of the transactions involved; (2) WON there was prejudice to Benguet Corp due to
the new BIR VAT Ruling.
Held: (1) NO. At the time when the subject transactions were consummated, the prevailing BIR
regulations relied upon by Benguet ordained that gold sales to the Central Bank were zero-rated.
Benguet should not be faulted for relying on the BIRs interpretation of the said laws and
regulations.
While it is true, as CIR alleges, that government is not estopped from collecting taxes which
remain unpaid on account of the errors or mistakes of its agents and/or officials and there could
be no vested right arising from an erroneous interpretation of law, these principles must give way
to
exceptions based on and in keeping with the interest of justice and fair play. (then the Court
cited the ABS-CBN case).
(2) YES. The adverse effect is that Benguet Corp became the unexpected and unwilling debtor to
the BIR of the amount equivalent to the total VAT cost of its product, a liability it previously could
have recovered from the BIR in a zero-rated scenario or at least passed on to the Central Bank
had it known it would have been taxed at a 10% rate. Thus, it is clear that Benguet suffered
economic prejudice when it consummated sales of gold to the Central Bank were taken out of the
zero-rated category. The change in the VAT rating of Benguet’s transactions with the Central
Bank resulted in the twin loss of its exemption from payment of output VAT and its opportunity
to recover input VAT, and at the same time subjected it to the 10% VAT sans the option to pass
on this cost to the Central Bank, with the total prejudice in money terms being equivalent to the
10% VAT levied on its sales of gold to the Central Bank. Even assuming that the right to recover
Benguets excess payment of income tax has not yet prescribed, this relief would only address
Benguet’s overpayment of income tax but not the other burdens discussed above. Verily, this
remedy is not a feasible option for Benguet because the very reason why it was issued a
deficiency tax assessment is that its input VAT was not enough to offset its retroactive output
VAT. Indeed, the burden of having to go through an unnecessary and cumbersome refund
process is prejudice enough.
- CIR v. Burmeisters & Wain Scandinavian, G.R. No. 153205, Jan. 2007
Facts: A foreign consortium, parent company of Burmeister, entered into an O&M contract with
NPC. The foreign entity then subcontracted the actual O&M to Burmeister. NPC paid the foreign
consortium a mixture of currencies while the consortium, in turn, paid Burmeister foreign
currency inwardly remitted into the Philippines. BIR did not want to grant refund since the
services are “not destined for consumption abroad” (or the destination principle).
Held: PARTIALLY. Respondent is entitled to the refund prayed for BUT ONLY for the period
covered prior to the filing of CIR’s Answer in the CTA.
The claim has no merit since the consortium, which was the recipient of services rendered by
Burmeister, was deemed doing business within the Philippines since its 15-year O&M with NPC
can not be interpreted as an isolated transaction.
In addition, the services referring to ‘processing, manufacturing, repacking’ and ‘services other
than those in (1)’ of Sec. 102 both require (i) payment in foreign currency; (ii) inward
remittance; (iii) accounted for by the BSP; AND (iv) that the service recipient is doing business
outside the Philippines. The Court ruled that if this is not the case, taxpayers can circumvent just
by stipulating payment in foreign currency.
The refund was partially allowed since Burmeister secured a ruling from the BIR allowing zero-
rating of its sales to foreign consortium. However, the ruling is only valid until the time that CIR
filed its Answer in the CTA which is deemed revocation of the previously-issued ruling. The Court
said the revocation can not retroact since none of the instances in Section 246 (bad faith,
omission of facts, etc.) are present.
Page 67 of 113
a. Non-retroactivity of BIR Rulings
- CIR v. Filinvest Dev’t. Corp., 654 SCRA 56
In cases where no formal agreements or promissory notes have been executed to cover credit
facilities, the documentary stamp tax shall be based on the amount of drawings or availment of
the facilities, which may be evidenced by credit/debit memo, advice or drawings by any form of
check or withdrawal slip, under Section 180 of the Tax Code. Applying the aforesaid provisions to
the case at bench, we find that the instructional letters as well as the journal and cash vouchers
evidencing the advances FDC extended to its affiliates in 1996 and 1997 qualified as loan
agreements upon which documentary stamp taxes may be imposed. In keeping with the caveat
attendant to every BIR Ruling to the effect that it is valid only if the facts claimed by the taxpayer
are correct, we find that the CA reversibly erred in utilizing BIR Ruling No. 116-98, dated 30 July
1998 which, strictly speaking, could be invoked only by ASB Development Corporation, the
taxpayer who sought the same.
FACTS The owner of 80% of the outstanding shares of respondent Filinvest Alabang, Inc. (FAI),
respondent Filinvest Development Corporation (FDC) is a holding company which also owned
outstanding shares of Filinvest Land, Inc. (FLI). Both transferred in favor of the latter parcels of
land intended to facilitate development of medium-rise residential and commercial buildings, and
in exchange,shares of stock of FLI were issued to FDC and FAI. As a result of the exchange, FLI’s
ownership structure was changed. FLI requested a ruling from the Bureau of Internal Revenue
(BIR) to the effect that no gain or loss should be recognized in the aforesaid transfer of real
properties. Acting on the request, the BIR issued Ruling No. S-34-046-97 dated 3 February 1997,
finding that the exchange is among those contemplated under Section 34 (c) (2) of the old
National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC)4 which provides that "(n)o gain or loss shall be
recognized if property is transferred to a corporation by a person in exchange for a stock in such
corporation of which as a result of such exchange said person, alone or together with others, not
exceeding four (4) persons, gains control of said corporation." With the BIR’s reiteration of the
foregoing ruling upon the 10 February 1997 request for clarification filed by FLI, the latter,
together with FDC and FAI, complied with all the requirements imposed in the ruling. On 3
January 2000, FDC received from the BIR a Formal Notice of Demand to pay deficiency income
and documentary stamp taxes, plus interests and compromise penalties. The deficiency taxes
were assessed on the taxable gain supposedly realized by FDC from the Deed of Exchange it
executed with FAI and FLI, on the dilution resulting from the Shareholders’ Agreement FDC
executed with RHPL as well as the "arm’s-length" interest rate and documentary stamp taxes
imposable on the advances FDC extended to its affiliates. On 3 January 2000, FAI similarly
received from the BIR a Formal Letter of Demand for deficiency income taxes. The deficiency tax
was also assessed on the taxable gain purportedly realized by FAI from the Deed of Exchange it
executed with FDC and FLI. Within the reglementary period of thirty (30) days from notice of the
assessment, both FDC and FAI filed their respective requests for reconsideration/protest, on the
ground that the deficiency income and documentary stamp taxes assessed by the BIR were
bereft of factual and legal basis. In view of the failure of petitioner Commissioner of Internal
Revenue (CIR) to resolve their request for reconsideration/protest within the aforesaid period,
FDC and FAI filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). The CTA went on to
render the Decision which, with the exception of the deficiency income tax on the interest income
FDC supposedly realized from the advances it extended in favor of its affiliates, cancelled the rest
of deficiency income and documentary stamp taxes assessed against FDC and FAI for the years
1996 and 1997. Dissatisfied with the foregoing decision, FDC filed the petition for review before
the CA. Upholding FDC's position, the CA's then Special Fifth Division granted the petition. With
the denial of its partial motion for reconsideration of the same, the CIR also filed the petition for
review docketed before the CA. The foregoing petition was, however, denied due course and
dismissed for lack of merit.
Although BIR Ruling No. 116-98 had been subsequently modified by BIR Ruling No. 108-99,
dated 15 July 1999, to the effect that documentary stamp taxes are imposable on inter-office
memos evidencing cash advances similar to those extended by FDC, said latter ruling cannot be
given retroactive application if to do so would be prejudicial to the taxpayer;
ISSUE Whether the letters of instruction or cash vouchers extended by FDC to its affiliates are
not deemed loan agreements subject to DST under Section 180 of the NIRC. (YES)
RULING
In its appeal before the CA, the CIR argued that the foregoing ruling was later modified in BIR
Ruling No. 108-99 dated 15 July 1999, which opined that inter-office memos evidencing lendings
or borrowings extended by a corporation to its affiliates are akin to promissory notes, hence,
Page 68 of 113
subject to documentary stamp taxes.64 In brushing aside the foregoing argument, however, the
CA applied Section 246 of the 1993 NIRC65 from which proceeds the settled principle that
rulings, circulars, rules and regulations promulgated by the BIR have no retroactive application if
to so apply them would be prejudicial to the taxpayers.66 Admittedly, this rule does not apply:
(a) where the taxpayer deliberately misstates or omits material facts from his return or in any
document required of him by the Bureau of Internal Revenue; (b) where the facts subsequently
gathered by the Bureau of Internal Revenue are materially different from the facts on which the
ruling is based; or (c) where the taxpayer acted in bad faith.67 Not being the taxpayer who, in
the first instance, sought a ruling from the CIR, however, FDC cannot invoke the foregoing
principle on non-retroactivity of BIR rulings.
In cases where no formal agreements or promissory notes have been executed to cover credit
facilities, the documentary stamp tax shall be based on the amount of drawings or availment of
the facilities, which may be evidenced by credit/debit memo, advice or drawings by any form of
check or withdrawal slip, under Section 180 of the Tax Code. Applying the aforesaid provisions to
the case at bench, we find that the instructional letters as well as the journal and cash vouchers
evidencing the advances FDC extended to its affiliates in 1996 and 1997 qualified as loan
agreements upon which documentary stamp taxes may be imposed. In keeping with the caveat
attendant to every BIR Ruling to the effect that it is valid only if the facts claimed by the taxpayer
are correct, we find that the CA reversibly erred in utilizing BIR Ruling No. 116-98, dated 30 July
1998 which, strictly speaking, could be invoked only by ASB Development Corporation, the
taxpayer who sought the same. In said ruling, the CIR opined that documents like those
evidencing the advances FDC extended to its affiliates are not subject to documentary stamp tax,
to wit: On the matter of whether or not the inter-office memo covering the advances granted by
an affiliate company is subject to documentary stamp tax, it is informed that nothing in
Regulations No. 26 (Documentary Stamp Tax Regulations) and Revenue Regulations No. 9-94
states that the same is subject to documentary stamp tax. Such being the case, said inter-office
memo evidencing the lendings or borrowings which is neither a form of promissory note nor a
certificate of indebtedness issued by the corporation-affiliate or a certificate of obligation, which
are, more or less, categorized as 'securities', is not subject to documentary stamp tax imposed
under Section 180, 174 and 175 of the Tax Code of 1997, respectively. Rather, the inter-office
memo is being prepared for accounting purposes only in order to avoid the co-mingling of funds
of the corporate affiliates.1avvphi1 In its appeal before the CA, the CIR argued that the foregoing
ruling was later modified in BIR Ruling No. 108-99 dated 15 July 1999, which opined that inter-
office memos evidencing lendings or borrowings extended by a corporation to its affiliates are
akin to promissory notes, hence, subject to documentary stamp taxes. In brushing aside the
foregoing argument, however, the CA applied Section 246 of the 1993 NIRC65 from which
proceeds the settled principle that rulings, circulars, rules and regulations promulgated by the
BIR have no retroactive application if to so apply them would be prejudicial to the taxpayers.
Admittedly, this rule does not apply: (a) where the taxpayer deliberately misstates or omits
material facts from his return or in any document required of him by the Bureau of Internal
Revenue; (b) where the facts subsequently gathered by the Bureau of Internal Revenue are
materially different from the facts on which the ruling is based; or (c) where the taxpayer acted
in bad faith. Not being the taxpayer who, in the first instance, sought a ruling from the CIR,
however, FDC cannot invoke the foregoing principle on non-retroactivity of BIR rulings. The Court
found both the CTA and the CA erred in invalidating the assessments issued by the CIR for the
deficiency documentary stamp taxes due on the instructional letters as well as the journal and
cash vouchers evidencing the advances FDC extended to its affiliates in 1996 and 1997.
Accordingly, Assessment Notices Nos. SP-DST-96-00020-2000 and SP-DST-97-00021-2000 issued
for deficiency documentary stamp taxes due on the instructional letters as well as journal and
cash vouchers evidencing the advances FDC extended to its affiliates are declared valid.
ISSUE:
Is the mortgagee-bank liable to pay the capital gains tax upon the execution of the certificate of
sale and before the expiry of the redemption period?
HELD:
NO. It is clear that in foreclosure sale there is no actual transfer of the mortgaged real property
until after the expiration of the one-year period and title is consolidated in the name of the
Page 69 of 113
mortgagee in case of non-redemption. This is because before the period expires there is yet no
transfer of title and no profit or gain is realized by the mortgagor.
Although the subject foreclosure sale and redemption took place before the effectivity of RR No.
4- 99, its provisions may be given retroactive effect in this case. Section 246 of the NIRC of 1997
states: SEC. 246. Non-Retroactivity of Rulings. – Any revocation, modification, or reversal of any
of the rules and regulations promulgated in accordance with the preceding Sections or any of the
rulings or circulars promulgated by the Commissioner shall not be given retroactive application if
the revocation, modification, or reversal will be prejudicial to the taxpayers, except in the
following cases: (a) where the taxpayer deliberately misstates or omits material facts from his
return or in any document required of him by the Bureau of Internal Revenue; (b) where the
facts subsequently gathered by the Bureau of Internal Revenue are materially different from the
facts on which the ruling is based; or (c) where the taxpayer acted in bad faith. In this case, the
retroactive application of RR No. 4-99 is more consistent with the policy of aiding the exercise of
the right of redemption. As the Court of Tax Appeals concluded in one case, RR No. 4- 99 "has
curbed the inequity of imposing a capital gains tax even before the expiration of the redemption
period [since] there is yet no transfer of title and no profit or gain is realized by the mortgagor at
the time of foreclosure sale but only upon expiration of the redemption period." In his
commentaries, De Leon expressed the view that while revenue regulations as a general rule have
no retroactive effect, if the revocation is due to the fact that the regulation is erroneous or
contrary to law, such revocation shall have retroactive operation as to affect past transactions,
because a wrong construction of the law cannot give rise to a vested right that can be invoked by
a taxpayer. Considering that herein petitioners-mortgagors exercised their right of redemption
before the expiration of the statutory one-year period, petitioner bank is not liable to pay the
capital gains tax due on the extrajudicial foreclosure sale. There was no actual transfer of title
from the ownersmortgagors to the foreclosing bank. Hence, the inclusion of the said charge in
the total redemption price was unwarranted and the corresponding amount paid by the
petitioners-mortgagors should be returned to them.
Issue:
Whether or not Burroughs is entitled to any tax credit.
Whether or not Memorandum Circular No. 8-82 should be given a retroactive effect?
Ruling:
Yes. Respondent concedes at least that in his ruling dated January 21, 1980 he held that under
Section 24 (b) (2) of the Tax Code the 15% branch profit remittance tax shall be imposed on the
profit actually remitted abroad and not on the total branch profit out of which the remittance is to
be made. Based on such ruling petitioner should have paid only the amount of P974,999.89 in
remittance tax computed by taking the 15% of the profits of P6,499,999.89 in remittance tax
actually remitted to its head office in the United States, instead of Pl,147,058.70, on its net
profits of P7,647,058.00. Undoubtedly, petitioner has overpaid its branch profit remittance tax in
the amount of P172,058.90.
No. What is applicable in the case at bar is still the Revenue Ruling of January 21, 1980 because
private respondent Burroughs Limited paid the branch profit remittance tax in question on March
Page 70 of 113
14, 1979. Memorandum Circular No. 8-82 dated March 17, 1982 cannot be given retroactive
effect in the light of Section 327 of the National Internal Revenue Code which provides-
Sec. 327. Non-retroactivity of rulings. Any revocation, modification, or reversal of any of the rules
and regulations promulgated in accordance with the preceding section or any of the rulings or
circulars promulgated by the Commissioner shag not be given retroactive application if the
revocation, modification, or reversal will be prejudicial to the taxpayer except in the following
cases (a) where the taxpayer deliberately misstates or omits material facts from his return or in
any document required of him by the Bureau of Internal Revenue; (b) where the facts
subsequently gathered by the Bureau of Internal Revenue are materially different from the facts
on which the ruling is based, or (c) where the taxpayer acted in bad faith. (ABS-CBN
Broadcasting Corp. v. CTA, 108 SCRA 151-152)
The prejudice that would result to private respondent Burroughs Limited by a retroactive
application of Memorandum Circular No. 8-82 is beyond question for it would be deprived of the
substantial amount of P172,058.90. And, insofar as the enumerated exceptions are concerned,
admittedly, Burroughs Limited does not fall under any of them.
FACTS RA 8240, entitled "An Act Amending Sections 138, 139, 140, and 142 of the NIRC, as
Amended and For Other Purposes," took effect on January 1, 1997. In the same year, Congress
passed RA 8424 or The Tax Reform Act of 1997, re-codifying the NIRC. Section 142 was
renumbered as Section 145 of the NIRC.Paragraph (c) of Section 145 provides for four tiers of
tax rates based on the net retail price per pack of cigarettes. To determine the applicable tax
rates of existing cigarette brands, a survey of the net retail prices per pack of cigarettes was
conducted as of October 1, 1996, the results of which were embodied in Annex "D" of the NIRC
as the duly registered, existing or active brands of cigarettes. To implement RA 8240, the Bureau
of Internal Revenue (BIR) issued Revenue Regulations No. 1- 97,2 which classified the existing
brands of cigarettes as those duly registered or active brands prior to January 1, 1997. New
brands, or those registered after January 1, 1997, shall be initially assessed at their suggested
retail price until such time that the appropriate survey to determine their current net retail price
is conducted. In June 2001, petitioner British American Tobacco introduced into the market Lucky
Strike Filter, Lucky Strike Lights and Lucky Strike Menthol Lights cigarettes, with a suggested
retail price of P9.90 per pack.3 Pursuant to Sec. 145 (c) quoted above, the Lucky Strike brands
were initially assessed the excise tax at P8.96 per pack. On February 17, 2003, Revenue
Regulations No. 9-2003,4 amended Revenue Regulations No. 1-97 by providing, among others, a
periodic review every two years or earlier of the current net retail price of new brands and
variants thereof for the purpose of establishing and updating their tax classification. Pursuant
thereto, Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-20035 was issued on March 11, 2003, prescribing
the guidelines and procedures in establishing current net retail prices of new brands of cigarettes
and alcohol products. Subsequently, Revenue Regulations No. 22-20036 was issued on August 8,
2003 to implement the revised tax classification of certain new brands introduced in the market
after January 1, 1997, based on the survey of their current net retail price. The survey revealed
that Lucky Strike Filter, Lucky Strike Lights, and Lucky Strike Menthol Lights, are sold at the
current net retail price of P22.54, P22.61 and P21.23, per pack, respectively. Respondent
Commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue thus recommended the applicable tax rate of
P13.44 per pack inasmuch as Lucky Strike’s average net retail price is above P10.00 per pack.
Thus, on September 1, 2003, petitioner filed before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Makati,
Branch 61, a petition for injunction with prayer for the issuance of a temporary restraining order
(TRO) and/or writ of preliminary injunction, docketed as Civil Case No. 03-1032. Said petition
sought to enjoin the implementation of Section 145 of the NIRC, Revenue Regulations Nos. 1-97,
9- 2003, 22-2003 and Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-2003 on the ground that they
discriminate against new brands of cigarettes, in violation of the equal protection and uniformity
provisions of the Constitution. Respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue filed an Opposition
Page 71 of 113
to the application for the issuance of a TRO. The trial court denied the application for TRO,
holding that the courts have no authority to restrain the collection of taxes. Meanwhile,
respondent Secretary of Finance filed a Motion to Dismiss, contending that the petition is
premature for lack of an actual controversy or urgent necessity to justify judicial intervention.
The trial court denied the motion to dismiss and issued a writ of preliminary injunction to enjoin
the implementation of Revenue Regulations Nos. 1-97, 9-2003, 22-2003 and Revenue
Memorandum Order No. 6-2003.11 Respondents filed a Motion for Reconsideration. The trial
court rendered a decision upholding the constitutionality of Section 145 of the NIRC, Revenue
Regulations Nos. 1-97, 9-2003, 22-2003 and Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-2003.
ISSUE 1. Whether Section 145 of the NIRC violates equal protection and uniformity clauses, thus
unconstitutional. (NO) 2. Whether Revenue Regulations Nos. 1-97, 9-2003, 22-2003 and Revenue
Memorandum Order No. 6-2003 are valid (NO)
RULING 1. A legislative classification that is reasonable does not offend the constitutional
guaranty of the equal protection of the laws. The classification is considered valid and reasonable
provided that: (1) it rests on substantial distinctions; (2) it is germane to the purpose of the law;
(3) it applies, all things being equal, to both present and future conditions; and (4) it applies
equally to all those belonging to the same class. The first, third and fourth requisites are
satisfied. The classification freeze provision was inserted in the law for reasons of practicality and
expediency. That is, since a new brand was not yet in existence at the time of the passage of RA
8240, then Congress needed a uniform mechanism to fix the tax bracket of a new brand. The
current net retail price, similar to what was used to classify the brands under Annex "D" as of
October 1, 1996, was thus the logical and practical choice. Further, with the amendments
introduced by RA 9334, the freezing of the tax classifications now expressly applies not just to
Annex "D" brands but to newer brands introduced after the effectivity of RA 8240 on January 1,
1997 and any new brand that will be introduced in the future.53 (However, as will be discussed
later, the intent to apply the freezing mechanism to newer brands was already in place even prior
to the amendments introduced by RA 9334 to RA 8240.) This does not explain, however, why the
classification is "frozen" after its determination based on current net retail price and how this is
germane to the purpose of the assailed law. An examination of the legislative history of RA 8240
provides interesting answers to this question. RA 8240 was the first of three parts in the
Comprehensive Tax Reform Package then being pushed by the Ramos Administration. It was
enacted with the following objectives stated in the Sponsorship Speech of Senator Juan Ponce
Enrile (Senator Enrile), viz: First, to evolve a tax structure which will promote fair competition
among the players in the industries concerned and generate buoyant and stable revenue for the
government. Second, to ensure that the tax burden is equitably distributed not only amongst the
industries affected but equally amongst the various levels of our society that are involved in
various markets that are going to be affected by the excise tax on distilled spirits, fermented
liquor, cigars and cigarettes. In the case of firms engaged in the industries producing the
products that we are about to tax, this means relating the tax burden to their market share, not
only in terms of quantity, Mr. President, but in terms of value. In case of consumers, this will
mean evolving a multi-tiered rate structure so that low-priced products are subject to lower tax
rates and higher-priced products are subject to higher tax rates. Third, to simplify the tax
administration and compliance with the tax laws that are about to unfold in order to minimize
losses arising from inefficiencies and tax avoidance scheme, if not outright tax evasion. From the
foregoing, it is quite evident that the classification freeze provision could hardly be considered
arbitrary, or motivated by a hostile or oppressive attitude to unduly favor older brands over
newer brands. Whether Congress acted improvidently in derogating, to a limited extent, the
state’s interest in promoting fair competition among the players in the industry, while pursuing
other state interests regarding the simplification of tax administration of sin products, elimination
of potential areas for abuse and corruption in tax collection, buoyant and stable revenue
generation, and ease of projection of revenues through the classification freeze provision, and
whether the questioned provision is the best means to achieve these state interests, necessarily
go into the wisdom of the assailed law which we cannot inquire into, much less overrule. The
classification freeze provision has not been shown to be precipitated by a veiled attempt, or
hostile attitude on the part of Congress to unduly favor older brands over newer brands. On the
contrary, we must reasonably assume, owing to the respect due a co-equal branch of
government and as revealed by the Congressional deliberations, that the enactment of the
questioned provision was impelled by an earnest desire to improve the efficiency and effectivity
of the tax administration of sin products. For as long as the legislative classification is rationally
related to furthering some legitimate state interest, as here, the rational-basis test is satisfied
and the constitutional challenge is perfunctorily defeated. In fine, petitioner may have valid
reasons to disagree with the policy decision of Congress and the method by which the latter
sought to achieve the same. But its remedy is with Congress and not this Court. As succinctly
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articulated in Vance v. Bradley: The Constitution presumes that, absent some reason to infer
antipathy, even improvident decisions will eventually be rectified by the democratic process, and
that judicial intervention is generally unwarranted no matter how unwisely we may think a
political branch has acted. Thus, we will not overturn such a statute unless the varying treatment
of different groups or persons is so unrelated to the achievement of any combination of
legitimate purposes that we can only conclude that the legislature's actions were irrational. 2. In
order to implement RA 8240 following its effectivity on January 1, 1997, the BIR issued Revenue
Regulations No. 1-97, dated December 13, 1996, which mandates a one-time classification
only.79 Upon their launch, new brands shall be initially taxed based on their suggested net retail
price. Thereafter, a survey shall be conducted within three (3) months to determine their current
net retail prices and, thus, fix their official tax classifications. However, the BIR made a
turnaround by issuing Revenue Regulations No. 9-2003, dated February 17, 2003, which partly
amended Revenue Regulations No. 1-97, by authorizing the BIR to periodically reclassify new
brands (i.e., every two years or earlier) based on their current net retail prices. Thereafter, the
BIR issued Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-2003, dated March 11, 2003, prescribing the
guidelines on the implementation of Revenue Regulations No. 9-2003. This was patent error on
the part of the BIR for being contrary to the plain text and legislative intent of RA 8240. It is
clear that the afore-quoted portions of Revenue Regulations No. 1-97, as amended by Section 2
of Revenue Regulations 9-2003, and Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-2003 unjustifiably
emasculate the operation of Section 145 of the NIRC because they authorize the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue to update the tax classification of new brands every two years or earlier
subject only to its issuance of the appropriate Revenue Regulations, when nowhere in Section
145 is such authority granted to the Bureau. Unless expressly granted to the BIR, the power to
reclassify cigarette brands remains a prerogative of the legislature which cannot be usurped by
the former. For these reasons, the amendments introduced by RA 9334 to RA 8240, insofar as
the freezing mechanism is concerned, must be seen merely as underscoring the legislative intent
already in place then, i.e. new brands as being covered by the freezing mechanism after their
classification based on their current net retail prices. It should be noted though that on August 8,
2003, the BIR issued Revenue Regulations No. 22-2003 which implemented the revised tax
classifications of new brands based on their current net retail prices through the market survey
conducted pursuant to Revenue Regulations No. 9-2003. Annex "A" of Revenue Regulations No.
22-2003 lists the result of the market survey and the corresponding recommended tax
classification of the new brands therein aside from Lucky Strike. However, whether these other
brands were illegally reclassified based on their actual current net retail prices by the BIR must
be determined on a case-to-case basis because it is possible that these brands were classified
based on their actual current net retail price for the first time in the year 2003 just like Lucky
Strike. Thus, we shall not make any pronouncement as to the validity of the tax classifications of
the other brands listed therein. Thus, Revenue Regulations No. 9-2003 and Revenue
Memorandum Order No. 6-2003 should be deemed modified by the above provisions from the
date of effectivity of RA 9334 on January 1, 2005. In sum, Section 4(B)(e)(c), 2nd paragraph of
Revenue Regulations No. 1-97, as amended by Section 2 of Revenue Regulations 9-2003, and
Sections II(1)(b), II(4)(b), II(6), II(7), III (Large Tax Payers Assistance Division II) II(b) of
Revenue Memorandum Order No. 6-2003, as pertinent to cigarettes packed by machine, are
invalid insofar as they grant the BIR the power to reclassify or update the classification of new
brands every two years or earlier. Further, these provisions are deeme modified upon the
effectivity of RA 9334 on January 1, 2005 insofar as the manner of determining the permanent
classification of new brands is concerned.
Page 73 of 113
HELD: No. The relaxation of revenue regulations by RMC 7-85 is not warranted as it disregards
the two-year prescriptive period set by law. Basic is the principle that "taxes are the lifeblood of
the nation." The primary purpose is to generate funds for the State to finance the needs of the
citizenry and to advance the common weal. Due process of law under the Constitution does not
require judicial proceedings in tax cases. This must necessarily be so because it is upon taxation
that the government chiefly relies to obtain the means to carry on its operations and it is of
utmost importance that the modes adopted to enforce the collection of taxes levied should be
summary and interfered with as little as possible. From the same perspective, claims for refund
or tax credit should be exercised within the time fixed by law because the BIR being an
administrative body enforced to collect taxes, its functions should not be unduly delayed or
hampered by incidental matters.
FACTS:
Team Energy Corporation (TEC) (formerly Mirant Pagbilao Corporation) is principally
engaged in the business of power generation and the subsequent sale thereof to the National
Power Corporation (NPC) under a Build, Operate, Transfer Scheme. It is also a VAT taxpayer.
December 17, 2004: TEC filed with the BIR Audit Information, Tax Exemption and Incentives
Division an Application for Effective Zero-Rate for the supply of electricity to the NPC for the
period January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2005, which was subsequently approved.
December 20, 2006: TEC filed an administrative claim for cash refund or issuance of tax
credit certificate corresponding to the input VAT reported in its Quarterly VAT Returns for the 1st
3 quarters of 2005 and Monthly VAT Declaration for October 2005 in the amount of
P80,136,251.60
April 18, 2007: Due to inaction on its claim, TEC filed a Petition for Review before the CTA in
Division
CTA in Division on July 13, 2010: Partially granted ordered to refund or in the alternative,
issue a tax credit certificate in the amount of P79,185,617.33 representing unutilized input VAT,
attributable to its effectively zero-rated sales of power generation services to NPC for the period
covering January 1, 2005 to October 31, 2005.
Court in Division: Granted CIR’s Motion for Reconsideration, reversed and set aside the
Decision dated July 13, 2010, and dismissed the Petition for Review for having been filed
prematurely
CTA En Banc: denied the Petition for Review for lack of merit and denied tis MR
Supreme Court 3rd Division: Granted Motion to Admit Attached Petition for Review on
Certiorari and granted the Certiorari remanded to the Court of Tax Appeals for the proper
determination of the refundable amount. It became final and executory on March 10, 2014 and
was recorded in the Book of Entries of Judgments.
January 9, 2015: CIR filed a Manifestation with Motion for Reinstatement of the July 13, 2010
Decision of the Court of Tax Appeals
CTA En Banc: Petition for Review is denied.
CIR filed a petition for review on certiorari
ISSUES:
1. W/N the Certificate of Compliance (COC) issued by the Energy Regulation Commission (ERC)
is indispensable in claiming a tax refund or tax credit.
2. W/N judicial claim was prematurely filed for its failure to exhaust administrative remedies when it
failed to submit complete supporting documents for its administrative claim
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Team Energy Corporation v. CIR (G.R. Nos. 197663 and 197770, March 14, 2018)
CIR that Team Energy is not entitled to tax refund or tax credit because it cannot
qualify for VAT zero-rating for its failure to submit its ERC Registration and COC required under
the EPIRA.
Effective zero-rating was intended to relieve the exempt entity from being burdened with the
indirect tax which is or which will be shifted to it had there been no exemption. In this case,
respondent is being exempted from paying VAT on its purchases to relieve NPC of the burden of
additional costs that respondent may shift to NPC by adding to the cost of the electricity sold to
the latter.
2. No. There is no showing that the CIR sent a written notice requiring respondent to submit
additional documents — a process that is indispensable in computing the 120+30 day period.
Pilipinas Total Gas, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (GR No. 207112, December
08, 2015)
To summarize, for the just disposition of the subject controversy, the rule is that from
the date an administrative claim for excess unutilized VAT is filed, a taxpayer has thirty (30) days
within which to submit the documentary requirements sufficient to support his claim, unless
given further extension by the CIR. Then, upon filing by the taxpayer of his complete documents
to support his application, or expiration of the period given, the CIR has 120 days within which to
decide the claim for tax credit or refund. Should the taxpayer, on the date of his filing, manifest
that he no longer wishes to submit any other addition documents to complete his administrative
claim, the 120-day period allowed to the CIR begins to run from the date of filing.
HELD:
1. Yes. Sec. 204 (c) and 229 are applied only in instances of erroneous payment and illegal
collection. Sec. 112 (A) of NIRC applies here. Sec. 31 Chapter VIII Book I of the Administrative
Code of 1987 being the more recent law governing legal period applies making 1 year = 12 months.
The principle of Lex Posterioni Derogati Priori applies. Thus, since it is filed on exactly Sept. 30,
2004 filing is timely.
2. Yes. Sec. 112 (D) of the NIRC clearly provides that the CIR has 120 days from date of the
submission of the complete documents in support of the application within which to grant or deny the
claim. In case of full or partial denial by the CIR, the recourse is to appeal before the CTA within 30
days from receipt of the decision of the CIR. However, if after the 120-day period the CIR fails to act
on the application for tax refund, the remedy is to appeal the inaction of the CIR to the CTA within 30
days.
2. Imprescriptibility of Taxes
- Sec. 222, NIRC
SEC. 222. Exceptions as to Period of Limitation of Assessment and Collection of Taxes. -
(a) In the case of a false or fraudulent return with intent to evade tax or of failure to file a
return, the tax may be assessed, or a proceeding in court for the collection of such tax may be
filed without assessment, at any time within ten (10) years after the discovery of the falsity,
fraud or omission: Provided, That in a fraud assessment which has become final and executory,
the fact of fraud shall be judicially taken cognizance of in the civil or criminal action for the
collection thereof.
(b) If before the expiration of the time prescribed in Section 203 for the assessment of the tax,
both the Commissioner and the taxpayer have agreed in writing to its assessment after such
time, the tax may be assessed within the period agreed upon. The period so agreed upon may be
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extended by subsequent written agreement made before the expiration of the period previously
agreed upon.
(c) Any internal revenue tax which has been assessed within the period of limitation as
prescribed in paragraph (a) hereof may be collected by distraint or levy or by a proceeding in
court within five (5) years following the assessment of the tax.
(d) Any internal revenue tax, which has been assessed within the period agreed upon as
provided in paragraph (b) hereinabove, may be collected by distraint or levy or by a proceeding
in court within the period agreed upon in writing before the expiration of the five (5) -year
period. The period so agreed upon may be extended by subsequent written agreements made
before the expiration of the period previously agreed upon.
(e) Provided, however, That nothing in the immediately preceding and paragraph (a) hereof
shall be construed to authorize the examination and investigation or inquiry into any tax return
filed in accordance with the provisions of any tax amnesty law or decree.
SEC. 270. Periods Within Which To Collect Real Property Taxes. - The basic real property tax and
any other tax levied under this Title shall be collected within five (5) years from the date they
become due. No action for the collection of the tax, whether administrative or judicial, shall be
instituted after the expiration of such period. In case of fraud or intent to evade payment of the
tax, such action may be instituted for the collection of the same within ten (10) years from the
discovery of such fraud or intent to evade payment. The period of prescription within which to
collect shall be suspended for the time during which:chanrobles virtual law library
(1) The local treasurer is legally prevented from collecting the tax;
(2) The owner of the property or the person having legal interest therein requests for
reinvestigation and executes a waiver in writing before the expiration of the period within which
to collect; and cralaw
(3) The owner of the property or the person having legal interest therein is out of the country or
otherwise cannot be located.
- CIR v. The Stanley Work Sales (Phils.), Inc. , G.R. No. 187589, December 3,
2014
The period to assess and collect deficiency taxes may be extended only upon a written
agreement between the CIR and the taxpayer prior to the expiration of the three-year prescribed
period in accordance with Section 222 (b) of the NIRC. In this case, the Supreme Court upheld
the ruling of the CTA Division that there were infirmities on the Waiver executed by respondent
on 16 November 1993. The Court found that the following requisites were absent: (1) Conformity
of either petitioner or a duly authorized representative; (2) Date of acceptance showing that both
parties had agreed on the Waiver before the expiration of the prescriptive period; and (3) Proof
that respondent was furnished a copy of the Waiver.
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FACTS Respondent is a domestic corporation duly organized and existing under Philippine laws
and duly registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. On March 19, 1993, the BIR
issued to Stanley Works a Pre-Assessment Notice No. 002523 for 1989 deficiency income tax. It
was received by the corporation on April 21, 1993. On May 19, 1993, Stanley Works through its
external auditors Punongbayan & Araullo, filed a protest letter and requested reconsideration and
cancellation of the assessment. On November 16, 1993, a certain Mr. John Ang, on behalf of the
corporation, executed a "Waiver of the Defense of Prescription Under the Statute of Limitations
of the National Internal Revenue Code" (Waiver). The Waiver was not signed by Stanley Works
or any of its authorized representatives and did not state the date of acceptance as prescribed
under Revenue Memorandum Order No. 20-90. Under the terms of the Waiver, Stanley Works
waived its right to raise the defense of prescription under Section 223 of the NIRC of 1977
insofar as the assessment and collection of any deficiency taxes for the year ended December 31,
1989, but not after June 30, 1994. On March 4, 2002, Stanley Works submitted a Supplemental
Memorandum alleging that CIR’s right to collect the alleged deficiency income tax has prescribed.
The CTA Division ruled that the request for reconsideration did not suspend the running of the
prescriptive period to collect deficiency income tax. This decision was affirmed by the CTA en
banc. CIR rendered a Decision denying respondent’s request for reconsideration and ordering
respondent to pay the deficiency income tax plus interest that may have accrued. Stanley Works
assailed the decision before the Court of Tax Appeals Division which ordered the cancellation of
the assessment ruling that although the assessment was made within the prescribed period, the
period within which petitioner may collect deficiency income taxes had already lapsed. Upon
appeal, the CTA En Banc affirmed the CTA First Division Decision
ISSUE Whether or not petitioner’s right to collect the deficiency income tax of respondent for
taxable year 1989 has prescribed. (YES)
RULING
The statute of limitations on the right to assess and collect a tax means that once the period
established by law for the assessment and collection of taxes has lapsed, the government’s
corresponding right to enforce that action is barred by provision of law. The period to assess and
collect deficiency taxes may be extended only upon a written agreement between the CIR and
the taxpayer prior to the expiration of the three-year prescribed period in accordance with
Section 222 (b) of the NIRC. Furthermore, jurisprudence is replete with requisites of a valid
waiver: 1. The waiver must be in the proper form prescribed by RMO 20-90. The phrase "but not
after ______ 19 ___", which indicates the expiry date of the period agreed upon to assess/collect
the tax after the regular three-year period of prescription, should be filled up. 2. The waiver must
be signed by the taxpayer himself or his duly authorized representative. In the case of a
corporation, the waiver must be signed by any of its responsible officials. In case the authority is
delegated by the taxpayer to a representative, such delegation should be in writing and duly
notarized. 3. The waiver should be duly notarized. 4. The CIR or the revenue official authorized
by him must sign the waiver indicating that the BIR has accepted and agreed to the waiver. The
date of such acceptance by the BIR should be indicated. However, before signing the waiver, the
CIR or the revenue official authorized by him must make sure that the waiver is in the prescribed
form, duly notarized, and executed by the taxpayer or his duly authorized representative. 5. Both
the date of execution by the taxpayer and date of acceptance by the Bureau should be before
the expiration of the period of prescription or before the lapse of the period agreed upon in case
a subsequent agreement is executed. 6. The waiver must be executed in three copies, the
original copy to be attached to the docket of the case, the second copy for the taxpayer and the
third copy for the Office accepting the waiver. The fact of receipt by the taxpayer of his/her file
copy must be indicated in the original copy to show that the taxpayer was notified of the
acceptance of the BIR and the perfection of the agreement.11 In Philippine Journalist, Inc. v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Court categorically stated that a Waiver must strictly
conform to RMO No. 20-90. The mandatory nature of the requirements set forth in RMO No. 20-
90, as ruled upon by this Court, was recognized by the BIR itself in the latter’s subsequent
issuances, namely, Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) Nos. 6-200513 and 29- 2012.14 Thus,
the BIR cannot claim the benefits of extending the period to collect the deficiency tax as a
consequence of the Waiver when, in truth it was the BIR’s inaction which is the proximate cause
of the defects of the Waiver. The BIR has the burden of ensuring compliance with the
requirements of RMO No. 20-90, as they have the burden of securing the right of the
government to assess and collect tax deficiencies. This right would prescribe absent any showing
of a valid extension of the period set by the law. To emphasize, the Waiver was not a unilateral
act of the taxpayer; hence, the BIR must act on it, either by conforming to or by disagreeing with
the extension. A waiver of the statute of limitations, whether on assessment or collection, should
not be construed asa waiver of the right to invoke the defense of prescription but, rather, an
agreement between the taxpayer and the BIR to extend the period to a date certain, within
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which the latter could still assess or collect taxes due. The waiver does not imply that the
taxpayer relinquishes the right to invoke prescription unequivocally. Although we recognize that
the power of taxation is deemed inherent in order to support the government, tax provisions are
not all about raising revenue. Our legislature has provided safeguards and remedies beneficial to
both the taxpayer, to protect against abuse; and the government, to promptly act for the
availability and recovery of revenues. A statute of limitations on the assessment and collection of
internal revenue taxes was adopted to serve a purpose that would benefit both the taxpayer and
the government. This Court has expounded on the significance of adopting a statute of limitation
on tax assessment and collection in this case:The provision of law on prescription was adopted in
our statute books upon recommendation of the tax commissioner of the Philippines which
declares: Under the former law, the right of the Government to collect the tax does not prescribe.
However, in fairness to the taxpayer, the Government should be estopped from collecting the tax
where it failed to make the necessary investigation and assessment within 5 years after the filing
of the return and where it failed to collect the tax within 5 years from the date of assessment
thereof. Just as the government is interested in the stability of its collection, so alsoare the
taxpayers entitled to an assurance that they will not be subjected to further investigation for tax
purposes after the expiration of a reasonable period of time. (Vol. II, Report of the Tax
Commission of the Philippines, pp. 321-322) The law prescribing a limitation of actions for the
collection of the income tax is beneficial both to the Government and to its citizens; to the
Government because tax officers would be obliged to act promptly in the making of assessment,
and to citizens because after the lapse of the period of prescription citizens would havea feeling
of security against unscrupulous tax agents who will always find an excuse to inspect the books
of taxpayers, not to determine the latter's real liability, but to take advantage of every
opportunity to molest peaceful, law-abiding citizens. Without such legal defense taxpayers would
furthermore be under obligation to always keep their books and keep them open for inspection
subject to harassment by unscrupulous tax agents. The law on prescription being a remedial
measure should be interpreted in a way conducive to bringing about the beneficient purpose of
affording protection to the taxpayer within the contemplation of the Commission which
recommends the approval of the law
Issue:
Whether or not the right to assess and collect the 25% surtax has prescribed after five years.
Held:
No. There is no such time limit on the right of the Commissioner to assess the 25% surtax since
there is no express statutory provision limiting such right or providing for its prescription. Hence,
the collection of surtax is imprescriptible. The underlying purpose of the surtax is to avoid a
situation where the corporation unduly retains its surplus earnings instead of declaring and
paying dividends to its shareholders. SC reverses the ruling of the CTA.
3. Double Taxation
a. Modes of Eliminating Double Taxation
- Manufacturer Insurance v. Meer, 89 Phil 210
FACTS:
Manufacturer Life Insurance Company was engaged in such business in the Philippines for more
than five years before and including the year 1941. But due to war it closed the branch office at
Manila during 1942 up to 1945. Plaintiff issued a number of life insurance policies in the
Philippines containing stipulations known as non-forfeiture clauses.
Since the insured failed to pay from 1942 to 1946, the company applied the provision of the
automatic premium loan clauses; and the net amount of premiums so advanced or loaned totaled
P1,069,254.98. On this sum the defendant Collector of Internal Revenue assessed P17,917.12.
The assessment was made pursuant to section 255 of the NIRC which put taxes on insurance
premiums paid by money, notes, credits or any substitutes for money.
Manufacturer contended that when it made premium loans or premium advances by virtue of the
non-forfeiture clauses, it did not collect premiums within the meaning of the above sections of
the law, and therefore it is not amendable to the tax provided.
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ISSUE:
Whether or not the collection of the alleged deficiency premium taxes constitutes double
taxation
RULING:
There is no constitutional prohibition against double taxation.
The total amount advanced worth 1 million pesos had P158,666.63 which was repaid at the time of
assessment notice. Besides, the premiums paid and on which taxes had already been collected
were those for the ten years. The tax demanded is on the premium for the eleventh year.
i. Tax exemption
A grant of immunity to particular persons or entities from the obligation to pay taxes.
v. Tax discount
Imposition of a rate lower than the normal domestic rate.
Facts: Respondent, a domestic corporation entered into a license agreement with SC Johnson
and Son, United States of America (USA), a non-resident foreign corporation. In said agreement,
the respondent was granted the right to use the trademark, patents and technology owned by
the latter. For the use of the trademark or technology, respondent was obliged to pay SC
Johnson and Son, USA royalties based on a percentage of net sales and subjected the same to
25% withholding tax on royalty payments which it paid for the period covering July 1992 to May
1993. On October 29, 1993, respondent filed with the International Tax Affairs Division (ITAD)
of the BIR a claim for refund of overpaid withholding tax on royalties, asserting that it is only
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subject to 10% withholding tax pursuant to the most favored nation clause of the RP-US Tax
Treaty in relation to the RP- West Germany Tax Treaty.
Issue:
Whether or not respondent is entitled to a royalty rate of 10% under the most favored nation
clause as provided in the RP-US Tax Treaty in relation to the RP-WEST Germany Tax Treaty
Ruling:
No. The most favored nation clause is intended to establish the principle of equality of
international treatment by providing that the citizens or subjects of the contracting nations may
enjoy the privileges accorded by either party to those of the most favored nation. The similarity
in the circumstances of payment of taxes is a condition for the enjoyment of most favored nation
treatment precisely to underscore the need for equality of treatment. Both the RP-US Tax Treaty
and the RP-West Germany Tax Treaty provide for a tax on royalties for the use of trademark,
patent, and technology. Article 24 of the RP-Germany Tax Treaty allows crediting against German
income and corporation tax of 20% of the gross amount of royalties paid under the law of the
Philippines while Article 23 of the RP-US Tax Treaty does not. Since the RP-US Tax Treaty does
not give a matching tax credit of 20 % for the taxes paid to the Philippines on royalties as
allowed under the RP-West Germany Tax Treaty, private respondent cannot be deemed entitled
to the 10% rate granted under the latter treaty for the reason that there is no payment of taxes
on royalties under similar circumstances.
At the same time, the intention behind the adoption of the provision on "relief from double
taxation" in the two tax treaties in question should be considered in light of the purpose behind
the most favored nation clause.
The purpose of a most favored nation clause is to grant to the contracting party treatment not
less favorable than that which has been or may be granted to the "most favored" among other
countries. 25 The most favored nation clause is intended to establish the principle of equality of
international treatment by providing that the citizens or subjects of the contracting nations may
enjoy the privileges accorded by either party to those of the most favored nation. 26 The essence
of the principle is to allow the taxpayer in one state to avail of more liberal provisions granted in
another tax treaty to which the country of residence of such taxpayer is also a party provided
that the subject matter of taxation, in this case royalty income, is the same as that in the tax
treaty under which the taxpayer is liable. Both Article 13 of the RP-US Tax Treaty and Article 12
(2) (b) of the RP-West Germany Tax Treaty, above-quoted, speaks of tax on royalties for the use
of trademark, patent, and technology. The entitlement of the 10% rate by U.S. firms despite the
absence of a matching credit (20% for royalties) would derogate from the design behind the
most grant equality of international treatment since the tax burden laid upon the income of the
investor is not the same in the two countries. The similarity in the circumstances of payment of
taxes is a condition for the enjoyment of most favored nation treatment precisely to underscore
the need for equality of treatment.
Facts:
1.Ericsson Telecommunications, Inc. is a corporation engaged in the design, engineering, and
marketing of telecommunication facilities/system with principal address at Pasig City
2.It was assessed by the City Treasurer of Pasig City of business tax deficiency for the years
1998 and 1999 and also for 2000 and 2001 based on its gross revenues.
3.Petitioner filed a Protest arguing that that the local business tax on contractors should be based
on gross receipts and not gross revenue.
Issue: What should be the basis of the local business tax? gross receipts or gross revenue?
Held: The basis should be gross receipts Paragraph e, Section 143 of the Local Government Code
provides that “The municipality may impose taxes on the following businesses: (e) On
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contractors and other independent contractors, The above provision specifically refers to gross
receipts. Section 131 of the Local Government Code defines gross sales or receipts as follows:
"Gross Sales or Receipts" - include the total amount of money or its equivalent representing the
contract price, compensation or service fee, including the amount charged or materials supplied
with the services and the deposits or advance payments actually or constructively received during
the taxable quarter for the services performed or to be performed for another person excluding
discounts if determinable at the time of sales, sales return, excise tax, and value-added tax
(VAT); The law is clear. Gross receipts include money or its equivalent actually or constructively
received in consideration of services rendered or articles sold, exchanged or leased, whether
actual or constructive. “Gross Revenue” - covers money or its equivalent actually or
constructively received, including the value of services rendered or articles sold, exchanged or
leased, the payment of which is yet to be received. This is in consonance with the International
Financial Reporting Standards, which defines revenue as the gross inflow of economic benefits
(cash, receivables, and other assets) arising from the ordinary operating activities of an
enterprise (such as sales of goods, sales of services, interest, royalties, and dividends), which is
measured at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable In petitioner's case, its
audited financial statements reflect income or revenue which accrued to it during the taxable
period although not yet actually or constructively received or paid. This is because petitioner uses
the accrual method of accounting, where income is reportable when all the events have occurred
that fix the taxpayer's right to receive the income, and the amount can be determined with
reasonable accuracy; the right to receive income, and not the actual receipt, determines when to
include the amount in gross income. The imposition of local business tax based on petitioner's
gross revenue will inevitably result in the constitutionally proscribed double taxation – taxing of
the same person twice by the same jurisdiction for the same thing– inasmuch as petitioner's
revenue or income for a taxable year will definitely include its gross receipts already reported
during the previous year and for which local business tax has already been paid.
ISSUE: Whether or not the collection of taxes under Section 21 of Ordinance No. 7794, as amended, constitutes double taxation. YES
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RULING:
Using the aforementioned test, the COURT finds that there is INDEED DOUBLE TAXATION IF RESPONDENT IS SUBJECTED TO THE
TAXES UNDER BOTH SECTIONS 14 AND 21 OF TAX ORDINANCE NO. 7794, since these are being imposed: (1) on the same subject
matter – the privilege of doing business in the City of Manila; (2) for the same purpose – to make persons conducting business within the City of
Manila contribute to city revenues; (3) by the same taxing authority – petitioner City of Manila; (4) within the same taxing jurisdiction – within
the territorial jurisdiction of the City of Manila; (5) for the same taxing periods – per calendar year; and (6) of the same kind or character – a
local business tax imposed on gross sales or receipts of the business.
Based on the foregoing reasons, PETITIONER should not have been subjected to taxes under Section 21 of the Manila Revenue Code for the
fourth quarter of 2001, considering that it had already been paying local business tax under Section 14 of the same ordinance.
Accordingly, respondent’s assessment under both Sections 14 and 21 had no basis. PETITIONER is indeed liable to pay business taxes to the
City of Manila; nevertheless, considering that the FORMER has already paid these taxes under Section 14 of the Manila Revenue Code, it is
exempt from the same payments under Section 21 of the same code. Hence, payments made under Section 21 must be refunded in favor of
petitioner. It is undisputed that PETITIONER paid business taxes based on Sections 14 and 21 for the fourth quarter of 2001 in the total amount of
₱470,932.21. Therefore, it is ENTITLED TO A REFUND OF ₱164,552.04 corresponding to the payment under Section 21 of the Manila
Revenue Code.
In fine, the IMPOSITION OF THE TAX UNDER SECTION 21 OF THE REVENUE CODE OF MANILA constituted double taxation, and
the taxes collected pursuant thereto must be refunded.
La Suerte was assessed by the BIR for excise tax deficiency amounting to more than 34 million
pesos. La Suerte protested invoking the Tax Code which allows the sale of stemmed leaf tobacco
as raw material by one manufacturer directly to another without payment of the excise tax.
However, the CIR insisted that stemmed leaf tobacco is subject to excise tax "unless there is an
express grant of exemption from [the] payment of tax."
La Suerte petitioned for review before the CTA which cancelled the assessment. The CIR
appealed to the CA which reversed the CTA. The CIR invoked a revenue regulation (RR) which
limits the exemption from payment of specific tax on stemmed leaf tobacco to sales transactions
between manufacturers classified as L-7 permittees.
Ruling: Importation of stemmed leaf tobacco not included in the exemption. The transaction
contemplated in Section 137 does not include importation of stemmed leaf tobacco for the
reason that the law uses the word "sold" to describe the transaction of transferring the raw
materials from one manufacturer to another.
[5] In this case, there is no double taxation in the prohibited sense because the specific tax is
imposed by explicit provisions of the Tax Code on two different articles or products: (1) on the
stemmed leaf tobacco; and (2) on cigar or cigarette.
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board of Iloilo City, believing, obviously, that with the passage of Republic Act 2264, otherwise
known as the Local Autonomy Act, it had acquired the authority or power to enact an ordinance
similar to that previously declared by this Court as ultra vires, enacted Ordinance 11, series of
1960. In Iloilo City, the appellees Eusebio Villanueva and Remedios S. Villanueva are owners of
five tenement houses, aggregately containing 43 apartments, while the other appellees and the
same Remedios S. Villanueva are owners of ten apartments. Each of the appellees' apartments
has a door leading to a street and is rented by either a Filipino or Chinese merchant. The first
floor is utilized as a store, while the second floor is used as a dwelling of the owner of the store.
Eusebio Villanueva owns, likewise, apartment buildings for rent in Bacolod, Dumaguete City,
Baguio City and Quezon City, which cities, according to him, do not impose tenement or
apartment taxes. By virtue of the ordinance in question, the appellant City collected from spouses
Eusebio Villanueva and Remedios S. Villanueva, for the years 1960-1964, the sum of P5,824.30,
and from the appellees Pio Sian Melliza, Teresita S. Topacio, and Remedios S. Villanueva, for the
years 1960-1964, the sum of P1,317.00. Eusebio Villanueva has likewise been paying real estate
taxes on his property. On July 11, 1962 and April 24, 1964, the plaintiffs-appellees filed a
complaint, and an amended complaint, respectively, against the City of Iloilo, in the
aforementioned court, praying that Ordinance 11, series of 1960, be declared "invalid for being
beyond the powers of the Municipal Council of the City of Iloilo to enact, and unconstitutional for
being violative of the rule as to uniformity of taxation and for depriving said plaintiffs of the equal
protection clause of the Constitution," and that the City be ordered to refund the amounts
collected from them under the said ordinance. The trial court condemned the ordinance as
constituting "not only double taxation but treble at that," because "buildings pay real estate taxes
and also income taxes as provided for in Sec. 182 (A) (3) (s) of the National Internal Revenue
Code, besides the tenement tax under the said ordinance."
ISSUE: Is Ordinance 11, series of 1960, of the City of Iloilo, illegal because it imposes double
taxation? (NO)
RULING:
Obviously, what the trial court refers to as "income taxes" are the fixed taxes on business and
occupation provided for in section 182, Title V, of the National Internal Revenue Code, by virtue
of which persons engaged in "leasing or renting property, whether on their account as principals
or as owners of rental property or properties," are considered "real estate dealers" and are taxed
according to the amount of their annual income. While it is true that the plaintiffs-appellees are
taxable under the aforesaid provisions of the National Internal Revenue Code as real estate
dealers, and still taxable under the ordinance in question, the argument against double taxation
may not be invoked. The same tax may be imposed by the national government as well as by the
local government. There is nothing inherently obnoxious in the exaction of license fees or taxes
with respect to the same occupation, calling or activity by both the State and a political
subdivision thereof. The contention that the plaintiffs-appellees are doubly taxed because they
are paying the real estate taxes and the tenement tax imposed by the ordinance in question, is
also devoid of merit. It is a well-settled rule that a license tax may be levied upon a business or
occupation although the land or property used in connection therewith is subject to property tax.
The State may collect an ad valorem tax on property used in a calling, and at the same time
impose a license tax on that calling, the imposition of the latter kind of tax being in no sensea
double tax. "In order to constitute double taxation in the objectionable or prohibited sense the
same property must be taxed twice when it should be taxed but once; both taxes must be
imposed on the same property or subject-matter, for the same purpose, by the same State,
Government, or taxing authority, within the same jurisdiction or taxing district, during the same
taxing period, and they must be the same kind or character of tax." It has been shown that a real
estate tax and the tenement tax imposed by the ordinance, although imposed by the sametaxing
authority, are not of the same kind or character. At all events, there is no constitutional
prohibition against double taxation in the Philippines. It is something not favored, but is
permissible, provided some other constitutional requirement is not thereby violated, such as the
requirement that taxes must be uniform
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occupation, or for selling the same article, this not being in violation of the rule against double
taxation
RULING: The term "tax" applies — generally speaking — to all kinds of exactions which become
public funds. The term is often loosely used to include levies for revenue as well as levies for
regulatory purposes. Thus license fees are commonly called taxes. Legally speaking, however,
license fee is a legal concept quite distinct from tax; the former is imposed in the exercise of
police power for purposes of regulation, while the latter is imposed under the taxing power for
the purpose of raising revenues (MacQuillin, Municipal Corporations, Vol. 9, 3rd Edition, p. 26).
Ordinance No. 3358 is clearly one that prescribes municipal license fees for the privilege to
engage in the business of selling liquor or alcoholic beverages, having been enacted by the
Municipal Board of Manila pursuant to its charter power to fix license fees on, and regulate, the
sale of intoxicating liquors, whether imported or locally manufactured. (Section 18 [p], Republic
Act 409, as amended). The license fees imposed by it are essentially for purposes of regulation,
and are justified, considering that the sale of intoxicating liquor is, potentially at least, harmful to
public health and morals, and must be subject to supervision or regulation by the state and by
cities and municipalities authorized to act in the premises. (MacQuillin, supra, p. 445.) On the
other hand, it is clear that Ordinances Nos. 3634, 3301, and 3816 impose taxes on the sales of
general merchandise, wholesale or retail, and are revenue measures enacted by the Municipal
Board of Manila by virtue of its power to tax dealers for the sale of such merchandise. (Section
10 [o], Republic Act No. 409, as amended.). Under Ordinance No. 3634 the word "merchandise"
as employed therein clearly includes liquor. Aside from this, we have held in City of Manila vs.
Inter-Island Gas Service, Inc., G.R. No. L-8799, August 31, 1956, that the word "merchandise"
refers to all subjects of commerce and traffic; whatever is usually bought and sold in trade or
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market; goods or wares bought and sold for gain; commodities or goods to trade; and
commercial commodities in general. That Tabacalera is being subjected to double taxation is
more apparent than real. As already stated what is collected under Ordinance No. 3358 is a
license fee for the privilege of engaging in the sale of liquor, a calling in which — it is obvious —
not anyone or anybody may freely engage, considering that the sale of liquor indiscriminately
may endanger public health and morals. On the other hand, what the three ordinances
mentioned heretofore impose is a tax for revenue purposes based on the sales made of the same
article or merchandise. It is already settled in this connection that both a license fee and a tax
may be imposed on the same business or occupation, or for selling the same article, this not
being in violation of the rule against double taxation This is precisely the case with the
ordinances involved in the case at bar.
d. Tax Pyramiding
FACTS: Pursuant to Letter of Authority No. ATD-035-STO dated January 2, 1986 and
Memorandum of Authority dated March 3, 1986, an investigation was conducted by [Bureau of
Internal Revenue (BIR)] examiners on the ad valorem and specific tax liabilities of [San Miguel
Corp. (SMC)] covering the period from January 1, 1985 to March 31, 1986. The result of the
investigation showed that [SMC] has a deficiency on specific and ad valorem taxes totaling
₱342,616,217.88 On the basis of these findings, the BIR sent a letter dated July 13, 1987 to SMC
demanding the payment of its deficiency tax in the amount of ₱342,616,217.88. Apparently, the
letter was received by the SMC, as it protested the assessment in its letter dated August 10, 1987
with the information: 1) that the alleged specific tax deficiency was already paid when the BIR
approved SMC’s request that its excess ad valorem payments be applied to its specific tax
balance; 2) that the computation of the ad valorem tax deficiency was erroneous since the BIR
examiners disallowed the deduction of the price differential (cost of freight from brewery to
warehouse) and ad valorem tax.The protest was denied by the BIR thru a letter dated October
[8], 1987 signed by accused Commissioner Bienvenido Tan, Jr., but the original assessment of
₱342,616,217.88 was reduced to ₱302,[0]51,048.93 due to the crediting of the taxpayer’s excess
ad valorem tax deposit of ₱21,805,409.10 with a reiteration of the payment of the x x x assessed
specific and ad valorem tax as reduced. On October 27, 1987, herein accused referred the matter
to Jaime M. Maza, Assistant BIR Commissioner, Legal Service Division and thereafter different
BIR officials also reviewed the case of SMC and rendered varying legal opinions on the issue x x x
"On the part of Alicia P. Clemeno, Chief, Legislative Ruling and Research Division, she
recommended the reduction of SMC’s tax liability, first to ₱21,856,985.29, and later to
₱22,000,000.00. Balbino E. Gatdula, Jr., Assistant Revenue Service Chief, Legal Service,
supported the demand for ad valorem tax deficiency from SMC. In a letter dated August 31,
1988, SMC, thru a certain Avendano offered the amount of ₱10,000,000.00 for the settlement of
the assessment. This was concurred in by Juanito Urbi, Chief, Prosecutor Division, BIR in a
Memorandum dated December 20, 1988. Jaime Maza, Assistant Commissioner, Legal Service,
BIR, also gave his concurrence to the recommendation that the offer of SMC for ₱10,000,000.00
in compromise settlement be accepted. The recommendation was approved by accused
Bienvenido Tan; and accordingly, in a letter dated December 20, 1988, SMC was informed that
its offer to compromise was accepted. Former BIR Commissioner Bienvenido A. Tan Jr. was
charged with "having willfully, unlawfully and criminally cause[d] undue injury to the government
by effecting a compromise of the tax liabilities" of SMC amounting to ₱302,051,048.93 for only
₱10,000,000, a "compromise [that] is grossly disadvantageous to the government The
Sandiganbayan acquitted herein private respondent ruling among others that: 1) the abatement
of SMC’s ad valorem taxes is proper. The tax base for computing them should not include the ad
valorem tax itself and the price differential. Reliance upon Executive Order (EO) No. 273 is not
misplaced, because that law simply affirms general principles of taxation as well as BIR’s
longstanding practice and policy not to impose a tax on a tax. Moreover, nothing precludes
private respondent from applying EO 273 on an assessment made prior to its effectivity, because
that law was merely intended to formalize such long-standing practice and policy; and 2) after
inquiring into the discretionary prerogative of private respondent to compromise, the SB found no
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reason to conclude that he had acted contrary to law or been impelled by any motive other than
honest good faith. The compromise he had entered into regarding SMC’s tax did not result in any
injury to the government. No genuine compromise is impeccable, since the parties to it must
perforce give up something in exchange for something else. No basis existed to hold him liable
for violation of Section 3(e) of RA 3019.
ISSUE: WON the respondent court acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction when, in upholding private respondent’s act in accepting SMC’s offer of
compromise of ₱10,000,000.00 for its tax liability of ₱302,051,048.93, it disregarded Sections 124
and 228 of the NIRC. (NO)
RULING: The SB did not gravely abuse its discretion when it upheld private respondent’s
acceptance of SMC’s compromise offer of ₱10 million. In computing its ad valorem tax liabilities
for the taxable period involved in the present case, SMC deducted from its brewer’s gross selling
price the specific tax, price differential, and ad valorem tax. The BIR allowed the deduction of the
specific tax, but not the deduction of the price differential and ad valorem tax, thus increasing
the tax base and consequently the ad valorem tax liabilities of SMC for the said period.
Prior to and during the taxable period involved in the present case, several changes were made
in the NIRC of 1977, particularly its provisions pertaining to fermented liquor. We must therefore
trace the NIRC’s pertinent history to be able to rule properly on the validity of SMC’s deduction of
both the price differential and the ad valorem taxfrom the brewer’s gross selling price. Section
147(A) of the NIRC, as amended by PD 1959 in 1984, provides for the collection of a specific tax
on each liter of the volume capacity of fermented liquor. In addition to the provision on the
specific tax, the first paragraph of its Section 147(B) provides for the levying, assessment and
collection of an ad valorem tax. The latter tax is equivalent to a certain percentage of the
brewer’s gross selling price, net of the specific tax, of the product to be removed from the
brewery or other place of manufacture. The ad valorem tax shall be paid by the brewer at the
same time as the specific tax. Added in 1984 were provisions of Section 186-Agoverning the
determination of the gross selling price of cigarettes, as well as the administrative requirements
and penalties imposable. Such provisions shall apply to the determination of the gross selling
price of fermented liquor. Basically, this means that the amount of tax due on the fermented
liquor shall be determined by the price at which it is sold either wholesale in the factory of SMC
or directly to the public through its sales agents. If the fermented liquor is sold or allowed to be
sold wholesale by SMC in another establishment which it owns, the wholesale price in that
establishment shall determine the tax applicable to the fermented liquor sold there. When the
price is less than the cost of manufacture plus all expenses incurred, until the fermented liquor is
finally sold by SMC, such cost plus expenses shall be the basis for determining the amount of tax
to be collected. In 1986, PD 1994 amended the NIRC of 1977 by renumbering, among others,
Section 147 as Section 124.In the new Section 124, the provisions on the specific and ad valorem
taxes imposed on fermented liquors remained substantially the same, except for the tax rates.
On July 1, 1986, Section 4 of EO 22 amended said Section 124 by essentially providing that an ad
valorem taxequivalent to a certain percentage of the brewer’s wholesale selling price -- this time
excluding the ad valorem tax -- shall be levied, assessed and collected on fermented liquors. It
was only in 1988 that EO 273 renumbered Section 124 as Section 140, and thereby amended it
further to exclude also from such wholesale price the value-added tax already imposed at the
time upon the same articles. Price Differential Deduction Section 110 of the NIRC of 1977, as
amended in 1986 by PD 1994, explicitly provides that the excise taxes on domestic products shall
be paid by the manufacturer or producer before the removal of those products from the place of
production."It does not matter to what use the article[s] subject to tax is put";the excise taxes
are still due, even though the articles are removed merely for storage in some other place and
are not actually sold or consumed.The intent of the law is reiterated in several implementing
regulations.This means, therefore, that the price that should be used as the tax base for
computing the ad valorem tax on fermented liquor is the price at the brewery. After all, excise
taxes are taxes on property, not on the sale of the property. Verily, the price differential cannot
be ascertained at the time the fermented liquor is removed from the brewery, because such
ascertainment will involve amounts that cannot be determined with certainty in advance, and
that vary from one commercial outlet to another. The price differential, according to SMC,
represents the cost of discounts, promotions, rebates, and transportation. To require the
inclusion of the price differential in, not its deduction from, the tax base for purposes of
computing the ad valorem tax would certainly lead to the impossible situation of computing for
such tax, because the price differential itself cannot be determined unless the fermented liquor is
actually sold. Hence, no ad valorem tax can ever be paid before the removal of the fermented
liquor from the place of production. This outcome cannot be countenanced, for it would be
contrary to what the law mandates -- payment before removal. It follows that the tax base to be
used should be net of the price differential. In other words, the gross selling price should be that
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which is charged at the brewery prior to the removal of the fermented liquor.Ad Valorem Tax
Deduction The taxable period covered in this case is January 1, 1985 to March 31, 1986. Prior to
the amendment of the NIRC of 1977 by EO 22 on July 1, 1986, the ad valorem tax was not
excluded from the brewer’s wholesale price. Does this mean that such tax cannot be deducted?
The answer is no. A tax should not be imposed upon another tax. This is tax pyramiding, which
has no basis either in fact or in law. Private respondent has shown by mathematical analysis that
the inclusion of the ad valorem tax in the tax base would only yield a circuitous manner of
computation that will never end in just one ad valorem tax figure properly chargeable against a
taxpayer. Equally important, tax pyramiding has since 1922 been rejected by this Court, the
legislature, and our tax authorities. The intent behind the law is clearly to obviate a tax imposed
upon another tax. Ratio legis est anima legis. The reason for the law is its spirit. For instance,
Regulations No. 27, promulgated March 1, 1923, already excludes the specific tax on cigars and
cigarettes from the tax base upon which such tax is computed.This is reiterated in the more
recent amendments to our tax law, among which are EOs 22 and 273,and their implementing
rules. In fact, Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. American Rubber Co. held that a taxpayer
cannot be "compelled to pay a x x x tax on the tax itself." Having shown the appropriateness of
deducting the ad valorem tax from the tax base upon which it is computed, private respondent
has shown prudence in exercising his power under Section 204(2) of the NIRC of 1977 to abate
an unjust, excessively assessed, and unreasonable tax; and to accept the offer of ₱10 million,if
only to avoid protracted and costly litigation.
FACTS:
American Rubber Company sold its rubber products locally and as prescribed by the Commissioner’s
regulation, the company declared the same for tax purposes in which the Commissioner accordingly
assessed. The company paid under protest the corresponding sales taxes thereon, claiming exemption
under Section 188b of the Tax Code, and subsequently claimed refund. With the Commissioner refusing
to do so, the case was brought before the Court of Tax Appeals, which upheld the Commissioner’s stand
that the company is not entitled to recover the sales tax that had been separately billed to its customers,
and paid by the latter.
ISSUE:
Whether plaintiff is or is not entitled to recover the sales tax paid by it, but passed on to and paid by the
buyers of its products
RULING:
Refund is proper. The sales tax is by law imposed directly, not on the thing sold, but on the act (sale) of
the manufacturer, producer or importer who is exclusively made liable for its time payment. There is no
proof that the tax paid by plaintiff is the very money paid by its customers. Where the tax money paid by
the plaintiff came from is really no concern of the Government. Anyway, once recovered, the plaintiff
must hold the refund taxes in trust for the individual purchasers who advanced payment thereof, and
whose names must appear in plaintiff’s records.
It would need to tend to perpetuate illegal taxation; for the individual customers to whom the tax is
ultimately shifted will ordinarily not care to sue for its recovery, in view of the small amount paid by each
and the high cost of litigation for the reclaiming of an illegal tax. Insofar, therefore, as it favors the
imposition, collection and retention of illegal taxes, and encourages a multiplicity of suits, the tax court’s
ruling under appeal violates morals and public policy.
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international carriers, the latter having been granted exemption from the payment of said excise
tax under Sec. 135 (a) of the NIRC.
FACTS: Shell filed a claim for refund for excise taxes it paid on sales of gas and fuel oils to
various international carriers. The Court initially denied the claims but the respondent filed a
Motion for Reconsideration.
ISSUE: Whether or not Shell is entitled to refund for payment of the excise taxes
RULING: Yes. Section 135 is concerned with the exemption of the article itself and not the
ostensible exemption of the international carrier-buyer. In addition, the failure to grant
exemption will cause adverse impact on the domestic oil industry (similar to the practice of
“tankering”) as well as result to violations of international agreements on aviation. Thus,
respondent, as the statutory taxpayer who is directly liable to pay the excise tax, is entitled to a
refund or credit for taxes paid on products sold to international carriers.
FACTS:
Philippine Acetylene Co. Inc. is engaged in the manufacture and sale of oxygen and acetylene
gases. It sold its products to the National Power Corporation (Napocor), an agency of the
Philippine Government, and the Voice of America (VOA), an agency of the United States
Government. When the commissioner assessed deficiency sales tax and surcharges against the
company, the company denied liability for the payment of tax on the ground that both Napocor
and VOA are exempt from taxes.
ISSUE:
Is Philippine Acetylene Co. liable for tax?
RULING:
Yes. Sales tax are paid by the manufacturer or producer who must make a true and complete
return of the amount of his, her or its gross monthly sales, receipts or earnings or gross value of
output actually removed from the factory or mill, warehouse and to pay the tax due thereon. The
tax imposed by Section 186 of the Tax Code is a tax on the manufacturer or producer and not a
tax on the purchaser except probably in a very remote and inconsequential sense. Accordingly,
its levy on the sales made to tax- exempt entities like the Napocor is permissible.
On the other hand, there is nothing in the language of the Military Bases Agreement to warrant
the general exemption granted by General Circular V-41 (1947). Thus, the expansive construction
of the tax exemption is void; and the sales to the VOA are subject to the payment of percentage
taxes under Section 186 of the Tax Code. Therefore, tax exemption is strictly construed and
exemption will not be held to conferred unless the terms under which it is granted clearly and
distinctly show that such was the intention.
b. Tax Avoidance
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FACTS: The spouses Manuel and Alicia Gala and their children Guia Domingo, Ofelia Gala, Raul
Gala and Rita Benson, and their encargados (rough translation; representatives) VirgilioGaleon
and Julian Jader, formed and organized Ellice Agro Industrial Corporation (Ellice). As payment for
their subscriptions the Spouses Gala transferred several parcles of land to Ellice. Subsequently,
the children and the encargados formed and organized another corporation, Margo Management
and Development Corporation (Margo). The father, Manuel Gala, sold his shares in Ellice to
Margo. Subsequently, Alicia transferred her shares to Margo. In 1990, a special stockholder’s
meeting of Margo was held where a new board of directors was elected. Raul Gala was elected
as chairman, president, and general manager. During the meeting, the board approved the
commencement of proceeding to annul the dispositions of Margos’s property made by Alicia Gala.
Similarity, a special stockholder’s meeting was held in Ellice. A new board was elected and Raul
Gala also became chairman, president and GM of Ellice, Raul Gala along with the respondents
filed a case against the petitiones in the SEC for accounting and restitution for alleged
mismanagement of funds of Ellice. In turn the petitioners filed in the SEC a petition for the
nullification of the election of directors of officers of both Margo and Ellice. Essentially, petitioners
sought to disregard the separate juridical personalities of two corporations, namely, Ellice Agro-
Industrial Corporation and Margo Management and Development Corporation, for the purpose of
treating all property purportedly owned by said corporations as properly solely owned by the Gala
Spouses. Among their arguments were: (1) said corporations were organized for purpose of
exempting the property the property of the Gala Spouses from the coverage of land reform laws,
and (2) the two corporations were meant to be used as mere tools for the avoidance of estate
taxes.
ISSUE: Whether the separate juridical personalities of Ellice and Margo could be disregard on the
grounds that they were meant to be tools to avoid land reform laws and estate taxes. (NO)
RULING: A perusal of the Articles of Incorporation of Ellice and Margo shows no sign of the
allegedly illegal purposes that petitioners are complaining of. And even assuming that the
petitioner’s allegations were true, the legality of the purposes for which the two corporations
were formed should be first threshed out in an administrative case before the Securities and
Exchange Commission. We cannot address here their concerns regarding circumvention of land
reform laws, for the doctrine of primary jurisdiction precludes a court from arrogating unto itself
the authority to resolve a controversy the jurisdiction over which is initially lodged with an
administrative body of special competence. Since primary jurisdiction over any violation of
Section 13 of Republic Act No. 3844 that may have been committed is vested in the Department
of Agrarian Reform Adjudication Board (DARAB),then it is with said administrative agency that
the petitioners must first plead their case. Moreover, on the contention that Ellice and Margo
were meant to be tools for the avoidance of estate taxes, the court said that “…the legal right of
a taxpayer to reduce the amount of what otherwise could be his taxes or altogether avoid them,
by means which the law permits, cannot be doubted.
FACTS: In 1952 the Collector of Internal Revenue assessed against the petitioner deficiency sales
taxes and surcharges for the year 1949 and the first four months of 1950 in the aggregate sum
of P89,123.58. The assessment was appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals, whence the case was
transferred to the Court of Tax Appeals upon its organization in 1954, and there was affirmed in
its decision dated February 28, 1952. The deficiency taxes in question were assessed on
importations of textiles from abroad. The goods were withdrawn from Customs by Pan- Asiatic
Commercial Co., Inc., which paid, in the name of the petitioner, the corresponding advance sales
tax under section 183(b) of the Internal Revenue Code. The assessment for the deficiency was
made against the petitioner, Heng Tong Textiles Co., Inc. on the ground that it was the real
importer of the goods and did not pay the taxes due on the basis of the gross selling prices
thereof.
ISSUE:
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Whether or not petitioner was guilty of fraud so as to warrant the imposition of a penalty of 50%
on the deficiency.
RULING:
Petitioner excepts to the conclusion of the Court of Tax Appeals and avers that the importation
papers were placed in the name of the petitioner only for purposes of accommodation, that is, to
introduce the petitioner to textile suppliers abroad; and that the petitioner was not in a financial
position to make the importations in question. These circumstances show nothing but a private
arrangement between the petitioner and Pan-Asiatic Commercial, which in no way affected the
role of the petitioner as the importer.
The arrangement resorted to does not by itself alone justify the penalty imposed. Section 183(a),
paragraph 3, of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 253, speaks of
willful neglect to file the return or wilful making of a false or fraudulent return. An attempt to
minimize one's tax does not necessarily constitute fraud. It is a settled principle that a taxpayer
may diminish his liability by any means which the law permits.
FACTS: Delfin Pacheco and his sister, Pelagia Pacheco, were the owners of 27,169 square meters
of real estate in the Municipality of Polo (now Valenzuela), Province of Bulacan (now Metro
Manila). The said co-owners leased to Construction Components International Inc. the same
property and providing that during the existence or after the term of this lease the lessor should
he decide to sell the property leased shall first offer the same to the lessee and the letter has the
priority to buy under similar conditions. On August 3, 1974, lessee Construction Components
International, Inc. assigned its rights and obligations under the contract of lease in favor of
Hydro Pipes Philippines, Inc. with the conformity and consent of lessors Delfin Pacheco and
Pelagia Pacheco. On January 3, 1976, a deed of exchange was executed between lessors Delfin
and Pelagia Pacheco and defendant Delpher Trades Corporation whereby the former conveyed to
the latter the leased property together with another parcel of land for 2,500 shares of stock of
defendant corporation with a total value of P1,500,000.00.
On the ground that it was not given the first option to buy the property, respondent Hydro Pipes
Philippines, Inc., a complaint for reconveyance of Lot. No. 1095 in its’ favour. The Court of First
Instance of Bulacan ruled in favor of the plaintiff. The lower court's decision was affirmed on
appeal by the Intermediate Appellate Court.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the "Deed of Exchange" of the properties executed by the Pachecos on the one
hand and the Delpher Trades Corporation on the other was meant to be a contract of sale.
RULING:
We rule for the petitioners. In the case at bar, in exchange for their properties, the Pachecos
acquired 2,500 original unissued no par value shares of stocks of the Delpher Trades
Corporation. Consequently, the Pachecos became stockholders of the corporation by subscription.
"The essence of the stock subscription is an agreement to take and pay for original unissued
shares of a corporation, formed or to be formed."
In effect, the Delpher Trades Corporation is a business conduit of the Pachecos. What they really
did was to invest their properties and change the nature of their ownership from unincorporated
to incorporated form by organizing Delpher Trades Corporation to take control of their properties
and at the same time save on inheritance taxes.
The records do not point to anything wrong or objectionable about this "estate planning" scheme
resorted to by the Pachecos. "The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of what
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otherwise could be his taxes or altogether avoid them, by means which the law permits, cannot
be doubted."
Held: Yes. It is an elementary and fundamental principle of corporation law that a corporation is
an entity separate and distinct from its stockholders and from other corporation petitions to
which it may be connected. However, "when the notion of legal entity is used to defeat public
convenience, justify wrong, protect fraud, or defend crime," the law will regard the corporation
as an association of persons, or in the case of two corporations merge them into one. Another
rule is that, when the corporation is the "mere alter ego or business conduit of a person, it may
be disregarded. However, the Court here held that they are inclined to rule that the Court of Tax
Appeals was not justified in finding that SM was organized for no other purpose than to defraud
the Government of its lawful revenues. In the first place, this corporation was organized in June,
1946 when it could not have caused Yutivo any tax savings. From that date up to June 30, 1947,
or a period of more than one year, GM was the importer of the cars and trucks sold to Yutivo,
which, in turn resold them to SM. During that period, it is not disputed that GM as importer, was
the one solely liable for sales taxes. Neither Yutivo or SM was subject to the sales taxes on their
sales of cars and trucks. The sales tax liability of Yutivo did not arise until July 1, 1947 when it
became the importer and simply continued its practice of selling to SM. The decision, therefore,
of the Tax Court that SM was organized purposely as a tax evasion device runs counter to the
fact that there was no tax to evade.
c. Tax Evasion
- CIR v. Estate of Benigno Toda, Jr., 438 SCRA 290
The scheme resorted to by CIC in making it appear that there were two sales of the subject
properties, i.e. from CIC to Altonaga, and then from Altonaga to RMI cannot be considered a
legitimate tax planning. Such scheme is tainted with fraud. Altonaga’s sole purpose of acquiring
and transferring title of the subject properties on the same day was to create a tax shelter. The
sale to him was merely a tax ploy, a sham, and without business purpose and economic
substance. Doubtless, the execution of the two sales was calculated to mislead the BIR with the
end in view of reducing the consequent income tax liability. This is a case of tax evasion.
F A C T S: On 2 March 1989, CIC authorized Benigno P. Toda, Jr., President and owner of
99.991% of its outstanding capital stock, to sell the Cibeles Building. On 30 August 1989, Toda
purportedly sold the property for P100 million to Rafael A. Altonaga, who, in turn, sold the same
property on the same day to Royal Match Inc. (RMI) for P200 million. Three and a half years later
Toda died. On 29 March 1994, the BIR sent an assessment notice and demand letter to the CIC
for deficiency income tax for the year 1989. On 27 January 1995, the Estate of Benigno P. Toda,
Jr., represented by special coadministrators Lorna Kapunan and Mario Luza Bautista, received a
Notice of Assessment from the CIR for deficiency income tax for the year 1989. The Estate
thereafter filed a letter of protest. The Commissioner dismissed the protest. On 15 February
1996, the Estate filed a petition for review with the CTA. In its decision the CTA held that the
Commissioner failed to prove that CIC committed fraud to deprive the government of the taxes
due it. It ruled that even assuming that a preconceived scheme was adopted by CIC, the same
constituted mere tax avoidance, and not tax evasion. Hence, the CTA declared that the Estate is
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not liable for deficiency of income tax. The Commissioner filed a petition for review with the
Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the CTA, hence, this recourse.
H E L D: CIC committed tax evasion. Tax avoidance and Tax evasion are the two most common
ways used by taxpayers in escaping from taxation. Tax avoidance is the tax saving device within
the means sanctioned by law. This method should be used by the taxpayer in good faith and at
arm’s length. Tax evasion, on the other hand, is a scheme used outside of those lawful means
and when availed of, it usually subjects the taxpayer to further or additional civil of criminal
liabilities. Tax evasion connotes the integration of three factors: (1) the end to be achieved, i.e.
the payment of less than that known by the taxpayer to be legally due, or the non-payment of
tax when it is shown that a tax is due; (2) an accompanying state of mind which is described as
being “evil,” in “bad faith,” “willfull,” or “deliberate and not accidental”; and (3) a course of action
or failure of action which is unlawful. All these factors are present in the instant case. The
scheme resorted to by CIC in making it appear that there were two sales of the subject
properties, i.e. from CIC to Altonaga, and then from Altonaga to RMI cannot be considered a
legitimate tax planning. Such scheme is tainted with fraud. Altonaga’s sole purpose of acquiring
and transferring title of the subject properties on the same day was to create a tax shelter. The
sale to him was merely a tax ploy, a sham, and without business purpose and economic
substance. Doubtless, the execution of the two sales was calculated to mislead the BIR with the
end in view of reducing the consequent income tax liability.
5. Tax Exemption
a. In General
- John Hay Special Economic Zone v. Lim, 414 SCRA 356
While the grant of economic incentives may be essential to the creation and success of SEZs, free
trade zones and the like, the grant thereof to the John Hay SEZ cannot be sustained. The
incentives under R.A. No. 7227 are exclusive only to the Subic SEZ. The claimed statutory
exemption of the John Hay SEZ from taxation should be manifest and unmistakable from the
language of the law on which it is based; it must be expressly granted in a statute stated in a
language too clear to be mistaken. Tax exemption cannot be implied as it must be categorically
and unmistakably expressed. If it were the intent of the legislature to grant to the John Hay SEZ
the same tax exemption and incentives given to the Subic SEZ, it would have so expressly
provided in the R.A. No. 7227.
FACTS: Then President Ramos issued Proclamation No. 420 which created the John Hay Special
Economic Zone pursuant to Republic Act No. 7227 entitled Bases and Development Act of 1992.
Republic Act No. 7227 created the Subic Special Economic Zone and granted it exemptions from
local and national taxes. Proclamation No. 420 also grants tax exemptions similar to that which is
granted to the Subic SEZ by RA 7227.
RULING: While the grant of economic incentives may be essential to the creation and success of
SEZs, free trade zones and the like, the grant thereof to the John Hay SEZ cannot be sustained.
The incentives under R.A. No. 7227 are exclusive only to the Subic SEZ, hence, the extension of
the same to the John Hay SEZ finds no support therein. Neither does the same grant of privileges
to the John Hay SEZ find support in the other laws specified under Section 3 of Proclamation No.
420, which laws were already extant before the issuance of the proclamation or the enactment of
R.A. No. 7227. More importantly, the nature of most of the assailed privileges is one of tax
exemption. It is the legislature, unless limited by a provision of the state constitution, that has
full power to exempt any person or corporation or class of property from taxation, its power to
exempt being as broad as its power to tax.Other than Congress, the Constitution may itself
provide for specific tax exemptions,or local governments may pass ordinances on exemption only
from local taxes. The challenged grant of tax exemption would circumvent the Constitution's
imposition that a law granting any tax exemption must have the concurrence of a majority of all
the members of Congress.In the same vein, the other kinds of privileges extended to the John
Hay SEZ are by tradition and usage for Congress to legislate upon. Contrary to public
respondents' suggestions, the claimed statutory exemption of the John Hay SEZ from taxation
should be manifest and unmistakable from the language of the law on which it is based; it must
be expressly granted in a statute stated in a language too clear to be mistaken.Tax exemption
cannot be implied as it must be categorically and unmistakably expressed. If it were the intent of
the legislature to grant to the John Hay SEZ the same tax exemption and incentives given to the
Subic SEZ, it would have so expressly provided in the R.A. No. 7227. This Court no doubt can
Page 92 of 113
void an act or policy of the political departments of the government on either of two grounds-
infringement of the Constitution or grave abuse of discretion. This Court then declares that the
grant by Proclamation No. 420 of tax exemption and other privileges to the John Hay SEZ is void
for being violative of the Constitution.
- CIR v. Phil. Associated Smelting & Refining Corp., 737 SCRA 328
"If the law confers an exemption from both direct or indirect taxes, a claimant is entitled to a tax
refund even if it only bears the economic burden of the applicable tax. On the other hand, if the
exemption conferred only applies to direct taxes, then the statutory taxpayer is regarded as the
proper party to file the refund claim. In PASAR's case, Section 17 of P.D. No. 66, as affirmed in
Commissioner of Customs, specifically declared that supplies, including petroleum products,
whether used directly or indirectly, shall not be subject to internal revenue laws and regulations.
Such exemption includes the payment of excise taxes, which was passed on to PASAR by Petron.
PASAR, therefore, is the proper party to file a claim for refund
FACTS: The respondent Philippine Associated Smelting and Refining Corporation (PASAR) is a
domestic corporation engaged in the business of processing, smelting, refining and exporting
refined copper cathodes and other copper products, and a registered Zone Export Enterprise with
the Export Processing Zone Authority (EPZA). PASAR uses petroleum products for its
manufacturing and other processes, and purchases it from local distributors, which import the
same and pay the corresponding excise taxes. The excise taxes paid are then passed on by the
local distributors to its purchasers. In this particular case, Petron passed on to PASAR the excise
taxes it paid on the petroleum products bought by the latter during the period of January 2005 to
October 2005, totalling eleven million six hundred eighty-seven thousand four hundred sixty-
seven 62/100 (P11,687,467.62). In December 2006, PASAR filed a claim for refund and/or tax
credit with the Office of the Regional Director of Region XIV, which denied the same in a letter
dated January 3, 2007. PASAR then filed a petition for review which was contested by the
petitioner. The petitioner also filed a motion to preliminarily resolve whether PASAR is the proper
party to ask for a refund. Thereafter, the parties agreed to the following stipulation of issues: 1.
Whether or not petroleum products purchased from Petron and delivered to PASAR to be used in
its operation in LIDE are exempt from excise taxes under Section 17 of P.D. No. 66 and thus
entitled to a refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate; and 2. Whether or not PASAR is the
proper party to claim for refund or issuance of tax credit certificate for excise taxes paid. In
granting PASAR's petition for review, the CTA En Banc ruled that it is the proper party to claim
the refund/credit. According to the CTA, since PASAR is a PEZA-registered entity enjoying tax
exemption privilege under Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 66 and subsequently, Republic Act
(R.A.) No. 7916, it is exempt from payment of excise taxes on petroleum products. And following
the Court's ruling in the Philippine Phosphate Fertilizer Corporation, PASAR, therefore, may seek
refund.
ISSUE: Whether PASAR has the legal personality to file the claim for the refund of the excise
taxes passed on by Petron. (YES)
RULING: PASAR is a business enterprise registered with the EPZA pursuant to P.D. No. 66. There
is no dispute as regards its use of fuel and petroleum products for the processing, smelting and
refining of its export copper products, and that Petron, from which PASAR purchased its fuel and
petroleum, products, passed on the excise taxes paid to the latter. In ruling that PASAR is the
proper party to file the claim for the refund/credit, the CTA En Bane chiefly relied on the Court's
rulings in Commissioner of Customs v. Philippine Phosphate Fertilizer Corp. and Philippine
Phosphate Fertilizer Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Commissioner of Customs
involved a claim for refund by Philippine Phosphate Fertilizer Corporation (Philphos) of the
customs duties it indirectly paid on fuel and petroleum products purchased from Petron
Corporation for the period of October 1991 until June 1992. This was opposed by the
Commissioner of Customs. One of the issues raised in the case was the legal basis for Philphos'
exemption from duties and taxes, it being an EPZA-registered company. While it may be true that
Commissioner of Customs involved the refund of customs duties paid on petroleum products, it
was nevertheless correctly applied by the CTA En Banc. Notably, in Commissioner of Customs,
the Court squarely interpreted the exemption granted under Section 17 of P.D. No. 66 as
applicable to both customs duties and internal revenue taxes, The incentives offered to
enterprises duly registered with the PEZA consist, among others, of tax exemptions, Section 17 of
the EPZA Law particularizes the tax benefits accorded to duly registered enterprises. It states:
SEC. 17. Tax Treatment of Merchandize in the Zone. - (1) Except as otherwise provided in this
Decree, foreign and domestic merchandise, raw materials, supplies, articles, equipment,
machineries, spare parts and wares of every description, except those prohibited by law, brought
into the Zone to be sold, stored, broken up, repacked, assembled, installed, sorted, cleaned,
Page 93 of 113
graded, or otherwise processed, manipulated, manufactured, mixed with foreign or domestic
merchandise or used whether directly or indirectly in such activity, shall not be subject to
customs and internal revenue laws and regulations nor to local tax ordinances, the following
provisions of law to the contrary notwithstanding. The cited provision certainly covers petroleum
supplies used, directly or indirectly, by Philphos to facilitate its production of fertilizers, subject to
the minimal requirement that these supplies are brought into the zone. The supplies are not
subject to customs and internal revenue laws and regulations, nor to local tax ordinances. It is
clear that Section 17(1) considers such supplies exempt even if they are used indirectly, as they
had been in this case. Thus, the Court affirmed the refund of customs duties granted by the CTA
and in closing, stated that "[t]he grant of exemption under Section 17(1) is clear and
unambiguous, x x x." Philphos, meanwhile, involved Philphos' claim for refund of excise taxes
passed on by Petron. One of the issues identified by the Court in the case was whether the CTA
should have granted the claim for refund. In resolving said issue, the Court ruled that the CTA
erred when it disallowed the petitioner's claim due to its failure to present invoices as there is
nothing in CTA Circular No. 1-95 that requires its presentation. The issue of whether the
petitioner was entitled to exemption from payment of excise taxes was not lengthily discussed by
the Court because it was already undisputed. Thus, the Court stated: In this case, there is no
dispute that petitioner is entitled to exemption from the payment of excise taxes by virtue of its
being an EPZA registered enterprise. As stated by the CTA, the only thing left to be determined is
whether or not petitioner is entitled to the amount claimed for refund. xxxx Since it is not
disputed that petitioner is entitled to tax exemption, it should not be precluded from presenting
evidence to substantiate the amount of refund it is claiming on mere technicality especially in this
case, where the failure to present invoices at the first instance was adequately explained by
petitioner. Applying the foregoing rulings in this case, it is therefore undeniable that PASAR is
exempted from payment of excise taxes. The next pivotal question then that must be resolved is
whether PASAR has the legal personality to file the claim for the refund of the excise taxes
passed on by Petron. The petitioner insists that PASAR is not the proper party to seek a refund of
an indirect tax, such as an excise tax or Value Added Tax, because it is not the statutory
taxpayer. The petitioner's argument, however, has no merit. The rule that it is the statutory
taxpayer which has the legal personality to file a claim for refund finds no applicability in this
case. In Philippine Airlines, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Court distinguished
between the kinds of exemption enjoyed by a claimant in order to determine the propriety of a
tax refund claim. "If the law confers an exemption from both direct or indirect taxes, a claimant
is entitled to a tax refund even if it only bears the economic burden of the applicable tax. On the
other hand, if the exemption conferred only applies to direct taxes, then the statutory taxpayer is
regarded as the proper party to file the refund claim. In PASAR's case, Section 17 of P.D. No. 66,
as affirmed in Commissioner of Customs, specifically declared that supplies, including petroleum
products, whether used directly or indirectly, shall not be subject to internal revenue laws and
regulations. Such exemption includes the payment of excise taxes, which was passed on to
PASAR by Petron. PASAR, therefore, is the proper party to file a claim for refund.
Page 94 of 113
whether it is the tax on such exemptions that should be deducted from the tax on the total net
income
SC Rulings:
1. It is agreed that the plaintiff was not a dealer in securities or share of stock as defined in
section 84 (t) of Commonwealth Act No. 466. The question for determination is whether
appellant, though not a dealer in mining securities, may be considered as engaged in the
business of buying and selling them under section 30 (d), (1) (A) of said Act No. 466.
It is evident that, taking into consideration the nature of mining securities, which may be bought
or sold either as a business or for speculation purposes only, the National Assembly of the
Philippines has deemed it necessary to define or determine beforehand in section 84 (t) of
Commonwealth Act No. 466 who may be considered as persons engaged in the trade or business
of buying and selling securities within the meaning of the phrase "incurred in trade or business"
used in section 30 (d) (1) (A) of the same Act, in order to avoid any question or doubt as to
deductibility of all losses incurred by a merchant in securities from his net income from whatever
source. The definition of dealer or merchant in securities given in said section 84 (t) includes
persons, natural or juridical, who are engaged in the purchase and sale of securities whether for
his their own account or for others, provided they have a place of business and are regularly
engaged therein.
Said section 84 (t) reads as follows:
(t) The term "dealer in securities" means a merchant of stocks or securities, whether an
individual, partnership, or corporation, with an established place of business, regularly engaged
in the purchase of securities and their resale of customers; that is, one who as a merchant buys
securities and sells them to customers with a view to the gains and profits that may be derived
therefrom.
If they are sound, the facts of the instant case require a ruling that the taxpayer was regularly
engaged in the business of buying and selling securities on his own account and was, therefore,
entitled to the benefit of the provisions of section 204(a).
But, assuming arguendo that the above-quoted opinion may be applied to the present case, it is
evident that the appellant cannot be considered as having been engaged in the business of
buying and selling securities within the meaning of section 30 (d) (1) (A) of Act No. 466
According to said opinion, in order that he may so be considered, it is necessary that he must
devote all his time or at least a major portion thereof to said business and that the latter must be
regularly carried on by him.
There is nothing therein to show that plaintiff and appellant has regularly devoted all his time or
the major portion thereof to the business of buying and selling mining securities for his own
account. On the contrary, it having been stipulated that he has been continuously engaged in the
embroidery business during the same time, it necessarily follows that he has not and could not
have devoted regularly all his time or a major portion thereof to the buying and selling of mining
securities.
Furthermore, from Exhibit A attached to the complaint and made a part of said stipulation of
facts, which represents plaintiff's purchases and sales of each class of stocks and securities as
well as the profits and losses resulting therefrom during the year 1939, it appears that he made
purchases and sales of securities only on several days of some months and nothing on others.
Appellant contends that as from Exhibit A it appears that the mining securities were inventoried
in order to arrive at his profits and losses, they cannot be considered as capital assets, because,
according to section 34, the term capital assets does not include property which would properly
be included in the inventory. But it is to be observed that the law refers not to property merely
included, but to that which would be properly included in the inventory. Section 148 of the
Income Tax Regulations No. 2 of February 10, 1940 (39 Off. Gaz., 325), provides that "the
securities (to be) inventoried as here provided may include only those held for purposes of resale
and not for investment," and that "the taxpayers who buy and sell or hold securities for
investment or speculation, . . . are not dealers insecurities within the meaning of this rule.”
The lower court has not therefore erred in dismissing appellant's first cause of action, on the
ground that the losses sustained by appellant from the buying and selling of mining securities are
not losses incurred in business or trade but are capital losses from sales of capital assets, as
contended by appellee.
2. With regard to the second point, the lower court held that, as the new law does not provide
that the personal exemptions shall be allowed in the nature of a deduction from the net income,
as prescribed in the old law, and there is a distinction between exemption and deduction, the tax
due on said exemptions must be deducted from the tax due on the whole net income, instead of
deducting the total amount of the exemptions from the net income.
The argument of the appellee in support of the lower court's decision is that the omission in
section 23 of Act No. 466 of the phrase "in the nature of a deduction" found in section 7 of the
old law, shows that it was the intention of the National Assembly to adopt the innovation
Page 95 of 113
proposed by the Tax Commission which prepared the draft of the new law, an innovation based
on what is known as the "Wisconsin Plan" now in operation in several American states. Under
said plan, the cumulative amount of the tax is fixed on any given amount of net income without
regard to the status of the taxpayer, and then this amount is reduced by the tax credit fixed in
the law according to the status of the taxpayer and the number of his dependents as follows: for
single individuals, there is allowed a tax credit of P10; for married persons or heads of family,
P30; and for each dependent below 21 years of age, P10.
Section 7 of the old law provided: "For the purpose of the normal tax only, there shall be allowed
as an exemption in the nature of a deduction from the amount of the net income . . ."; while
section 23 of the new law provides: "For the purpose of the tax provided for in this Title there
shall be allowed the following exemptions."
It is a well-settled rule of statutory construction that where a statue has been enacted which is
susceptible of several interpretations there is no better means for ascertaining the will and
intention of the legislature than that which is afforded by the history of the statue. Taking into
consideration the history of section 23 of the Commonwealth Act No. 466, the answer to the
above-propounded question must obviously be in the negative.
The lower court, therefore, erred in not declaring that personal and additional exemptions
claimed by appellant should be credited against or deducted from the net income, and
consequently in not sentencing appellee to refund to appellant the sum of P475.
ISSUES:
(1) WON it waived the Manila City gov't's right to impose taxes and license fees, which is
recognized by law.
(2) WON it has intruded into the LGUs' right to impose local taxes and license fees, and thus
contrary to the principle of local autonomy enshrined in the Constitution.
(3) WON it violates the equal protection clause as it allows some gambling acts but also prohibits
other gaming acts.
(4) WON it violates the Cory gov't's policy of being away from monopolistic and crony economy,
and toward free enterprise and privatization.
HELD:
(1) No. The fact that PAGCOR, under its charter, is exempt from paying tax of any kind is not
violative of the principle of local autonomy. LGUs' have no inherent right to impose taxes. LGUs'
power to tax must always yield to a legislative act which is superior having been passed by the
state itself which has the inherent power to tax. The charter of LGUs is subject to control by
Congress as they are mere creatures of Congress. Congress, therefore, has the power of control
over LGUs. And if Congress can grant the City of Manila the power to tax certain matters, it can
also provide for exemptions or even take back the power.
(2) No. LGUs' right to impose license fees on "gambling", has long been revoked. As early as
1975, the power of local governments to regulate gambling thru the grant of "franchise, licenses
or permits" was withdrawn by P.D. No. 771 and was vested exclusively on the National
Government. Furthermore, LGUs' have no power to tax instrumentalities of the gov't such as
PAGCOR which exercises governmental functions of regulating gambling activities.
(3) No. The clause does not preclude classification of individuals who may be accorded different
treatment under the law as long as the classification is not unreasonable or arbitrary. A law does
not have to operate in equal force on all persons or things to be conformable to Article III,
Section 1 of the Constitution. The Constitution does not require situations which are different in
fact or opinion to be treated in law as though they were the same.
(4) No. The judiciary does not settle policy issues. The Court can only declare what the law is and
not what the law should be. Under our system of government, policy issues are within the
domain of the political branches of government and of the people themselves as the repository of
all state power. On the issue of monopoly, the same is not necessarily prohibited by the
Constitution. The state must still decide whether public interest demands that monopolies be
"regulated" or prohibited. Again, this is a matter of policy for the Legislature to decide. The
judiciary can only intervene when there are violations of the statutes passed by Congress
regulating or prohibiting monopolies.
Page 96 of 113
- CIR v. Botelho Shipping Corp., 20 SCRA 487
FACTS: Reparations Commission of the Philippines sold to Botelho the vessel "M/S Maria Rosello"
for the amount of P6,798,888.88. The former likewise sold to General Shipping the vessel "M/S
General Lim" at the price of P6,951,666.66. Upon arrival at the port of Manila, the Bureau of
Customs placed the same under custody and refused to give due course [to applications for
registration], unless the aforementioned sums of P483,433 and P494,824 be paid as
compensating tax. The buyers subsequently filed with the CTA their respective petitions for
review. Pending the case, Republic Act No. 3079 amended Republic Act No. 1789 — the Original
Reparations Act, under which the aforementioned contracts with the Buyers had been executed
— by exempting buyers of reparations goods acquired from the Commission, from liability for the
compensating tax.
Invoking [section 20 of the RA 3079], the Buyers applied, for the renovation of their utilizations
contracts with the Commission, which granted the application, and, then, filed with the Tax
Court, their supplemental petitions for review. The CTA ruled in favor of the buyers.
[On appeal, the CIR and COC maintain that such proviso should not be applied retroactively],
upon the ground that a tax exemption must be clear and explicit; that there is no express
provision for the retroactivity of the exemption, established by Republic Act No. 3079, from the
compensating tax; that the favorable provisions, which are referred to in section 20 thereof,
cannot include the exemption from compensating tax; and, that Congress could not have
intended any retroactive exemption, considering that the result thereof would be prejudicial to
the Government.
HELD: YES. The inherent weakness of the last ground becomes manifest when we consider that,
if true, there could be no tax exemption of any kind whatsoever, even if Congress should wish to
create one, because every such exemption implies a waiver of the right to collect what otherwise
would be due to the Government, and, in this sense, is prejudicial thereto. It may not be amiss to
add that no tax exemption — like any other legal exemption or exception — is given without any
reason therefor. In much the same way as other statutory commands, its avowed purpose is
some public benefit or interest, which the law-making body considers sufficient to offset the
monetary loss entitled in the grant of the exemption. Indeed, section 20 of Republic Act No. 3079
exacts a valuable consideration for the retroactivity of its favorable provisions, namely, the
voluntary assumption, by the end-user who bought reparations goods prior to June 17, 1961 of
"all the new obligations provided for in" said Act.
Furthermore, Section 14 of the Law on Reparations, as amended, exempts from the
compensating tax, not particular persons, but persons belonging to a particular class. Indeed,
appellants do not assail the constitutionality of said section 14, insofar as it grants exemptions to
end-users who, after the approval of Republic Act No. 3079, on June 17, 1961, purchased
reparations goods procured by the Commission. From the viewpoint of Constitutional Law,
especially the equal protection clause, there is no difference between the grant of exemption to
said end-users, and the extension of the grant to those whose contracts of purchase and sale
mere made before said date, under Republic Act No. 1789.
Page 97 of 113
revenue director issued an assessment of distraint and levy against the properties of Guerrero, in
order to effect the collection of his tax liability under said reassessment. Hence, on June 8, 1956,
Guerrero filed with the court of tax appeals the corresponding petition for review. Subsequently,
said court rendered the decision appealed from. Hence, these appeals.
Held: No. The foregoing circumstances clearly indicate that the logs involved in said
reassessment were obtained from illegal sources, and that the forest charges due thereon had
not been paid. Since these charges “are lieu on the products and collectible from whomsoever is
in possession” thereof, unless he can show that he has the required auxiliary and official invoice
and discharge permit – which Guerrero has not shown – it follows that he is bound to pay the
aforementioned forest charges and surcharges, in the sum of Php 3,775.66.
At this juncture, it may not be amiss to advert to a problem of semantics arising from the
operation of section 1588 of the revised administrative code, the counterpart of which is is now
section 315 of the NIRC, pursuant to which:
Every internal revenue tax on property or on any business or occupation, and every tax on
resources and receipts, and any increment to any of them incident to delinquency, shall
constitute a lien superior to all other charges or liens not only on the property itself upon which
such tax may be imposed but also upon the property used in any business or occupation upon
which the tax is imposed and upon all property rights therein.
The enforcement of this lien by the commissioner (formerly collector) of internal revenue, has
often induced the parties adversely affected thereby to raise the question whether a given charge
is a tax or not, on the theory that there would be no lien if said question were decided in the
negative. In connection therewith, said parties had tended to distinguish between taxes, on the
one hand – as burdens imposed upon persons and/or properties, by way of contributions to the
support of the government, in consideration of general benefits derived from its operation – and
license fees – charged in the exercise of the regulatory authority of the state, under its police
power – and other charges – for specific things or special or particular benefits received from the
government – on the other hand.
FACTS:
Philippine Acetylene Co. Inc. is engaged in the manufacture and sale of oxygen and acetylene
gases. It sold its products to the National Power Corporation (Napocor), an agency of the
Philippine Government, and the Voice of America (VOA), an agency of the United States
Government. When the commissioner assessed deficiency sales tax and surcharges against the
company, the company denied liability for the payment of tax on the ground that both Napocor
and VOA are exempt from taxes.
ISSUE:
Is Philippine Acetylene Co. liable for tax?
RULING:
Yes. Sales tax are paid by the manufacturer or producer who must make a true and complete
return of the amount of his, her or its gross monthly sales, receipts or earnings or gross value of
output actually removed from the factory or mill, warehouse and to pay the tax due thereon. The
tax imposed by Section 186 of the Tax Code is a tax on the manufacturer or producer and not a
tax on the purchaser except probably in a very remote and inconsequential sense. Accordingly,
its levy on the sales made to tax- exempt entities like the Napocor is permissible.
Page 98 of 113
On the other hand, there is nothing in the language of the Military Bases Agreement to warrant
the general exemption granted by General Circular V-41 (1947). Thus, the expansive construction
of the tax exemption is void; and the sales to the VOA are subject to the payment of percentage
taxes under Section 186 of the Tax Code. Therefore, tax exemption is strictly construed and
exemption will not be held to conferred unless the terms under which it is granted clearly and
distinctly show that such was the intention.
FACTS: Commonweath Act No. 120 was enacted creating the National Power Corporation (NPC),
a public corporation, mainly to develop hydraulic power and the production of power from other
sources in the Philippines. To facilitate payment of its indebtedness, the NPC was exempted from
all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, charges and restrictions of the Republic of the Philippines, its
provinces, cities and municipalities. The charter of the NPC was subsequently revised to give to it
the power to carry out the policy of national electrification. PD No. 380 was issued and specified
that NPC’s tax exemption includes all taxes imposed directly and indirectly on all petroleum
products used by NPC in its operation. Subsequently, PD No. 938 was enacted which integrated
the tax exemption privilege of NPC in general terms. After a series of withdrawal and restoration
of NPC’s tax exemption, the Fiscal Incentives Review Board, possessing the power to restore tax
exemptions issued Resolution 10-85 restoring NPC’s exemption from June 11, 1984 to June 30,
1985. Since 1976, oil firms never paid excise or specific and ad valorem taxes for petroleum
products sold and delivered to NPC. Such taxes were paid on their sales of oil products to NPC
only in 1984. As such, NPC claimed for a refund of P468.58 Million and only a portion was
approved and released. NPC moved for reconsideration, stating that all the deliveries of
petroleum products to NPC are tax exempt. Petitioner contends that Presidential Decree No. 938
repealed the indirect tax exemption of NPC as Sec 10 thereof does not expressly include “indirect
taxes”.
ISSUE: Whether the National Power Corporation still possessed indirect tax exemption after the
repeal made in PD 938. (YES)
RULING: NPC laws show that it has been the lawmaker’s intention that the NPC was to be
completely tax exempt from all forms of taxes – direct and indirect. One common theme in all the
laws above is that the NPC must be able to pay its indebtedness which, as of PD No. 938, was
P12 Billion in total domestic indebtedness, at any one time, and US$4 Billion in total foreign loans
at any one time. The NPC must be and has to be exempt from all forms of taxes if this goal is to
be achieved. In addition to this, the then President Marcos mandated that P200 million be
appropriated annually to NPC which amount to be taken from the general fund of the
government. It does not stand to reason that the then President would order the said amount to
be taken partially or totally from the tax money to be used to pay the government subscription in
the NPC on one hand and order NPC to pay its indirect tax. It must also be noted that Section 10
of PD 938 was intended to be in its general form. President Marcos must have considered all the
NPC statutes. When construing a series of statutes, they shall be taken and construed together
as in statutes in pari materia. Moreover, repeal by implication is not favored unless it is manifest
that the legislature so intended.
Page 99 of 113
written claim for refund was filed with the BIR. However, before the said claim for refund could
be acted upon by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, SEA-LAND filed a petition for review
with the CTA docketed, to judicially pursue its claim for refund and to stop the running of the
two-year prescriptive period under the then Section 243 of the NIRC. CTA rendered its decision
denying SEA-LANDs claim for refund of the income tax it paid in 1984. Petitioner appealed the
decision of the CTA to the CA. The CA promulgated its decision dismissing the appeal and
affirming in toto the decision of the CTA. Hence, this petition.
ISSUE Whether the income that petitioner derived from services in transporting the household
goods and effects of U. S. military personnel falls within the tax exemption provided in Article XII,
paragraph 4 of the RP-US Military Bases Agreement
HELD No. Laws granting exemption from tax are construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer
and liberally in favor of the taxing power. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception.
The law does not look with favor on tax exemptions and that he who would seek to be thus
privileged must justify it by words too plain to be mistaken and too categorical to be
misinterpreted. Under Article XII (4) of the RPUS Military Bases Agreement, the Philippine
Government agreed to exempt from payment of Philippine income tax nationals of the United
States, or corporations organized under the laws of the United States, residents in the United
States in respect of any profit derived under a contract made in the United States with the
Government of the United States in connection with the construction, maintenance, operation
and defense of the bases. It is obvious that the transport or shipment of household goods and
effects of U. S. military personnel is not included in the term construction, maintenance,
operation and defense of the bases. Neither could the performance of this service to the U. S.
government be interpreted as directly related to the defense and security of the Philippine
territories. When the law speaks in clear and categorical language, there is no reason for
interpretation or construction, but only for application. The avowed purpose of tax exemption is
some public benefit or interest, which the lawmaking body considers sufficient to offset the
monetary loss entailed in the grant of the exemption. The hauling or transport of household
goods and personal effects of U. S. military personnel would not directly contribute to the
defense and security of the Philippines.
ISSUE: W/N the basis should be the higher rates prescribed by Sec. 153 and 156 of the 1997 NIRC
HELD: NO. A tax cannot be imposed unless it is supported by the clear and express language of a
statute; On the other hand, once the tax is unquestionably imposed, a claim of exemption from tax
payments must be clearly shown and based on language in the law too plain to be mistaken.
Section 5, RA 1435 as a tax exemption, must be construed strictissimi juris against the grantee.
Supported by CIR v. CA and Atlas Co., CIR v. Rio Tuba Nickel Mining Corp. and Insular
Lumber Co. - all cases where purchases was made BEFORE 1997 NIRC is in effect.
According to an eminent authority on taxation, there is no tax exemption solely on the ground
of equity
PLDT paid a franchise tax equal to three percent (3%) of its gross receipts. The franchise
tax was paid “in lieu of all taxes on this franchise or earnings thereof” pursuant to RA
Issue:
Whether or not by virtue of RA 7925, Sec. 23, PLDT is again entitled to the exemption
from payment of the local franchise tax in view of the grant of tax exemption to Globe
and Smart.
Held:
Petitioner contends that because their existing franchises contain “in lieu of all taxes”
clauses, the same grant of tax exemption must be deemed to have become ipso facto part
of its previously granted telecommunications franchise. But the rule is that tax
exemptions should be granted only by a clear and unequivocal provision of law
“expressed in a language too plain to be mistaken” and assuming for the nonce that the
charters of Globe and of Smart grant tax exemptions, then this runabout way of granting
tax exemption to PLDT is not a direct, “clear and unequivocal” way of communicating
the legislative intent. Nor does the term “exemption” in Sec. 23 of RA 7925 mean tax
exemption. The term refers to exemption from regulations and requirements imposed by
the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC). For instance, RA 7925, Sec. 17
provides: The Commission shall exempt any specific telecommunications service from its
rate or tariff regulations if the service has sufficient competition to ensure fair and
reasonable rates of tariffs. Another exemption granted by the law in line with its policy of
deregulation is the exemption from the requirement of securing permits from the NTC
every time a telecommunications company imports equipment. Tax exemptions should be
granted only by clear and unequivocal provision of law on the basis of language too plain
to be mistaken.
Facts: In the early 1990’s, power outages lasted 8-12 hours daily and power generation was badly needed. The
government, through the National Power Corporation (NPC), sought to attract investors in power plant operations by
providing them with incentives, one of which was through the NPC’s assumption of payment of their taxes in the
Build Operate and Transfer (BOT) Agreement.
On September 23, 1992, the BOI issued a certificate of registration to BPC as a pioneer enterprise entitled to a tax
holiday for a period of six (6) years. On October 12, 1998, Batangas City sent a letter to BPC demanding payment of
business taxes and penalties, commencing from the year 1994, BPC refused to pay, citing its tax-exempt status as a
pioneer enterprise for six (6) years under Section 133 (g) of the Local Government Code (LGC). The city’s tax
claim was modified and demanded payment of business taxes from BPC only for the years 1998-1999. BPC still
refused to pay the tax. It insisted that its 6-year tax holiday commenced from the date of its commercial operation on
July 16, 1993, not from the date of its BOI registration in September 1992.
In the alternative, BPC asserted that the city should collect the tax from the NPC as the latter assumed responsibility
for its payment under their BOT Agreement. On August 26, 1999, the NPC intervened. While admitting assumption
of BPC’s tax obligations under their BOT Agreement, NPC refused to pay BPC’s business tax as it allegedly
constituted an indirect tax on NPC which is a tax-exempt corporation under its Charter.
BPC filed a petition for declaratory relief12 with the Makati RTC against Batangas City and NPC. It alleged that
under the BOT Agreement, NPC is responsible for the payment of such taxes but as NPC is exempt from taxes, both
the BPC and NPC are not liable for its payment.
Makati RTC dismissed the petition and held that: (1) BPC is liable to pay business taxes to the city; (2) NPC’s tax
exemption was withdrawn with the passage of R.A. No. 7160 (The Local Government Code); and, (3) the 6-year tax
holiday granted to pioneer business enterprises starts on the date of registration with the BOI as provided in Section
133 (g) of R.A. No. 7160, and not on the date of its actual business operations.
Issue: Whether or not NPC’s tax exemption privileges under its Charter were withdrawn by Section 193 of the
Local Government Code (LGC).
Held: Yes. The effect of the LGC on the tax exemption privileges of the NPC has already been extensively
discussed and settled in the recent case of National Power Corporation v. City of Cabanatuan. In said case, this
Court recognized the removal of the blanket exclusion of government instrumentalities from local taxation as one of
the most significant provisions of the 1991 LGC. Specifically, we stressed that Section 193 of the LGC, an express
and general repeal of all statutes granting exemptions from local taxes, withdrew the sweeping tax privileges
previously enjoyed by the NPC under its Charter.
The power to tax is no longer vested exclusively on Congress; local legislative bodies are now given direct authority
to levy taxes, fees and other charges pursuant to Article X, section 5 of the 1987 Constitution. The LGC is
considered as the most revolutionary piece of legislation on local autonomy, the LGC effectively deals with the
fiscal constraints faced by LGUs. It widens the tax base of LGUs to include taxes which were prohibited by previous
laws.
Neither can the NPC successfully rely on the Basco case as this was decided prior to the effectivity of the LGC,
when there was still no law empowering local government units to tax instrumentalities of the national government.
Thus, while BPC remains to be the entity doing business in said city, it is the NPC that is ultimately liable to pay
said taxes under the provisions of both the 1992 BOT Agreement and the 1991 Local Government Code.
Other Issue: Whether BPC’s 6-year tax holiday commenced on the date of its BOI registration as a pioneer
enterprise or on the date of its actual commercial operation as certified by the BOI.
Sec. 133 (g) of the LGC, which proscribes local government units (LGUs) from levying taxes on BOI-certified
pioneer enterprises for a period of six years from the date of registration, applies specifically to taxes imposed by
the local government, like the business tax imposed by Batangas City on BPC in the case at bar. The 6-year tax
exemption of BPC should thus commence from the date of BPC’s registration with the BOI.
ISSUE:
Whether or not RA 7716 is unconstitutional.
RULING:
No. In withdrawing the exemption, the law merely subjects the press to the same tax burden to
which other businesses have long ago been subject. The VAT is not a license tax. It is imposed
purely for revenue purposes.
Equality and uniformity of taxation mean that all taxable articles or kinds of property of the same
class be taxed at the same rate. It is enough that the statute or ordinance applies equally to all
persons, firms, and corporations placed in similar situation.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the appellate court failed to consider Meralco’s failure to substantiate by positive
evidence its entitlement to a tax refund or credit.
HELD:
In case the corporation is entitled to a refund of the excess estimated quarterly income taxes
paid, the refundable amount shown on its final adjustment return may be credited against the
estimated quarterly income tax liabilities for the taxable quarters of the succeeding taxable year.
The issue of whether MERALCO adduced sufficient evidence to prove its entitlement to a refund
is a question of fact. It bears noting that the tax court and the appellate court found MERALCO’s
claim for tax refund or credit meritorious on the basis of the testimonial and documentary
evidence adduced by the parties. It bears noting too that the Commissioner did not dispute the
validity and authenticity of MERALCO’s quarterly income tax returns as well as the final
adjustment returns for the years 1987 and 1988 and proofs of payment of its tax liabilities.
Neither did the Commissioner refute MERALCO’s assertion that Commissioner failed to cross-
examine its accountant who testified on the returns, and to object to its offer of evidence which
included its quarterly and final adjustment returns and proofs of payment of its tax liabilities. It is
doctrinal that the factual findings of the Court of Tax Appeals, when supported by substantial
evidence, will not be disturbed on appeal, unless it is shown that it committed gross error in the
appreciation of facts. Hence, as a matter of practice and principle, this Court will not set aside the
conclusion reached by the said court, especially if affirmed by the Court of Appeals as in the
present case. For by the nature of its functions, the tax court dedicates itself to the study and
consideration of tax problems and necessarily develops expertise thereon, unless there has been
an abuse or improvident exercise of authority on its part. None such is appreciated by this Court,
however.
Issue:
Whether the 35% transaction tax is a business tax to which petitioner is exempt under the
mining law. [NO]
Ratio:
The 35% transaction tax is imposed on interest income from commercial papers issued in the
primary money market. Being a tax on interest, it is a tax on income.
Taxation; the 35% transactions tax is a tax on the interest income of the lender and, therefore, a
mining company who borrowed money, and withheld and paid said tax on interest paid to the
lender cannot claim exemption therefrom even if it has a tax exemption certificate - as a mining
company
“The 35% transaction tax is an income tax on interest earnings to the lenders or placers. The
latter are actually the taxpayers. Therefore, the tax cannot be a tax imposed upon the petitioner.
In other words, the petitioner who borrowed funds from several financial institutions by issuing
commercial papers merely withheld the 35% transaction tax before paying to the financial
institutions the interests earned by them and later remitted the same to the respondent
Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The tax could have been collected by a different procedure
but the statute chose this method. Whatever collecting procedure is adopted does not change
the nature of the tax.”
Deductibility or non-deductibility from gross income does not determine the nature of the tax.
[chanrobles]
“Whether or not certain taxes are on income is not necessarily determined by their deductibility
or non-deductibility from gross income. As correctly observed by the Solicitor General, income in
the form of dividends, capital gains on real property pursuant to Batas Pambansa Blg. 37, shares
of stock pursuant to Presidential Decree 1739, and interests on savings in bank accounts, for
instance, are incomes, yet they are not includible in the gross income when income taxes are
paid because these are subject to final withholding taxes.
The location of the 35% tax in the Tax Code does not necessarily determine its nature. A tax is a
tax on income even if located on the Code’s provisions on business taxes.
Contention: The petitioner also submits that the 35% transaction tax is a business tax because it
is imposed under Title V, entitled "Taxes on Business" and classified specially under Chapter II,
entitled "Tax on Business."
The location of the 35% tax in the Tax Code does not necessarily determine its nature. Again, we
agree with the Solicitor General that the legislative body must have realized later that the subject
tax was inappropriately included among the taxes on business because Section 210 of the Tax
Code has been repealed by Presidential Decree No. 1739, which now imposes a tax of 20% on
interests from deposits and yields from deposit substitutes such as commercial papers issued in
the primary market as principal instrument and provides for them in Section 24(cc) under
Chapter III, Tax on Corporations, Title II — Income Tax.
ii. Implied
- John Hay Special Economic Zone v. Lim, 414 SCRA 356
FACTS: Then President Ramos issued Proclamation No. 420 which created the John Hay Special
Economic Zone pursuant to Republic Act No. 7227 entitled Bases and Development Act of 1992.
RULING: While the grant of economic incentives may be essential to the creation and success of
SEZs, free trade zones and the like, the grant thereof to the John Hay SEZ cannot be sustained.
The incentives under R.A. No. 7227 are exclusive only to the Subic SEZ, hence, the extension of
the same to the John Hay SEZ finds no support therein. Neither does the same grant of privileges
to the John Hay SEZ find support in the other laws specified under Section 3 of Proclamation No.
420, which laws were already extant before the issuance of the proclamation or the enactment of
R.A. No. 7227. More importantly, the nature of most of the assailed privileges is one of tax
exemption. It is the legislature, unless limited by a provision of the state constitution, that has
full power to exempt any person or corporation or class of property from taxation, its power to
exempt being as broad as its power to tax.Other than Congress, the Constitution may itself
provide for specific tax exemptions,or local governments may pass ordinances on exemption only
from local taxes. The challenged grant of tax exemption would circumvent the Constitution's
imposition that a law granting any tax exemption must have the concurrence of a majority of all
the members of Congress.In the same vein, the other kinds of privileges extended to the John
Hay SEZ are by tradition and usage for Congress to legislate upon. Contrary to public
respondents' suggestions, the claimed statutory exemption of the John Hay SEZ from taxation
should be manifest and unmistakable from the language of the law on which it is based; it must
be expressly granted in a statute stated in a language too clear to be mistaken.Tax exemption
cannot be implied as it must be categorically and unmistakably expressed. If it were the intent of
the legislature to grant to the John Hay SEZ the same tax exemption and incentives given to the
Subic SEZ, it would have so expressly provided in the R.A. No. 7227. This Court no doubt can
void an act or policy of the political departments of the government on either of two grounds-
infringement of the Constitution or grave abuse of discretion. This Court then declares that the
grant by Proclamation No. 420 of tax exemption and other privileges to the John Hay SEZ is void
for being violative of the Constitution.
iii. Contractual
- MCIAA v. Marcos, 261 SCRA 667
FACTS:
Petitioner was created by virtue of RA 6958. Section 1 thereof states that the authority shall be
exempt from realty taxes imposed by the National Government or any of its political subdivisions,
agencies and instrumentalities. However, the Treasurer of Cebu City demanded payment for
realty taxes from petitioner. Petitioner filed a declaratory relief before the Regional Trial Court.
The trial court dismissed the petitioner ruling that the Local Government Code withdrew the tax
exemption granted to Government owned and controlled corporation.
ISSUE:
Whether the city of Cebu has the power to impose taxes on petitioner
RULING:
Yes. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception, the exemption may thus be withdrawn
at the pleasure of the taxing authority. As to tax exemptions or incentives granted to or presently
enjoyed by natural or juridical persons, including government- owned and controlled
corporations, section 193 of the LGC prescribes the general rule, viz, they are withdrawn upon
the effectivity of the LGC, except those granted to local water districts, cooperatives, duly
registered under RA 6938, non stock and nonprofit hospitals and educational institutions and
unless otherwise provided in the LGC.
ISSUE
Whether power barges, which are floating and movable, are personal properties and therefore,
not subject to real property tax.
RULING
No. Article 415 (9) of the New Civil Code provides that "[d]ocks and structures which, though
floating, are intended by their nature and object to remain at a fixed place on a river, lake, or
coast" are considered immovable property. Thus, power barges are categorized as immovable
property by destination, being in the nature of machinery and other implements intended by the
owner for an industry or work which may be carried on in a building or on a piece of land and
which tend directly to meet the needs of said industry or work. The findings of the LBAA and
CBAA that the owner of the taxable properties is petitioner FELS is the entity being taxed by the
local government. As stipulated under the Agreement: OWNERSHIP OF POWER BARGES. POLAR
shall own the Power Barges and all the fixtures, fittings, machinery and equipment on the Site
used in connection with the Power Barges which have been supplied by it at its own cost. POLAR
shall operate, manage and maintain the Power Barges for the purpose of converting Fuel of
NAPOCOR into electricity. It follows then that FELS cannot escape liability from the payment of
realty taxes by invoking its exemption in Section 234 (c) of R.A. No. 7160,…the law states that
the machinery must be actually, directly and exclusively used by the government owned or
controlled corporation; The agreement POLAR undertakes that until the end of the Lease Period,
it will operate the Power Barges to convert such Fuel into electricity. Therefore, FELS shall be
liable for the realty taxes and not the NPC who is not actually, directly and exclusively using the
same. It is a basic rule that obligations arising from a contract have the force of law between the
parties
ISSUE:
Whether or not RA 7716 is unconstitutional.
RULING:
No. In withdrawing the exemption, the law merely subjects the press to the same tax burden to
which other businesses have long ago been subject. The VAT is not a license tax. It is imposed
purely for revenue purposes. Equality and uniformity of taxation mean that all taxable articles or
kinds of property of the same class be taxed at the same rate. It is enough that the statute or
ordinance applies equally to all persons, firms, and corporations placed in similar situation.
Held: Local Tax Regulation 3-75 issued by the Secretary of Finance in 1976 made it clear that the
franchise tax provided in the Local Tax Code may only be imposed on companies with franchise
that do not contain the exempting clause, i.e. “in-lieu-of-all-taxes-proviso.” CEPALCO’s franchise
i.e. RA 3247, 3571 and 6020 (Section 3 thereof), uniformly provides that “in consideration of the
franchise and rights hereby granted, the grantee shall pay a franchise tax equal to 3% of the
gross earnings for electric current sold under the franchise, of which 2% goes to the national
Treasury and 1% goes into the treasury of the municipalities of Tagoloan, Opol, Villanueva,
Jasaan, and Cagayan de Oro, as the case may be: Provided, that the said franchise tax of 3% of
the gross earnings shall be in lieu of all taxes and assessments of whatever authority upon
privileges, earnings, income, franchise and poles, wires, transformers, and insulators of the
grantee from which taxes and assessments the grantee is hereby expressly exempted.
- Batangas Power Corp. v. Batangas City and NPC, 428 SCRA 250
Facts: In the early 1990’s, power outages lasted 8-12 hours daily and power generation was
badly needed. The government, through the National Power Corporation (NPC), sought to attract
investors in power plant operations by providing them with incentives, one of which was through
the NPC’s assumption of payment of their taxes in the Build Operate and Transfer (BOT)
Agreement.
On June 29, 1992, Enron Power Development Corporation (Enron) and petitioner NPC entered
into a Fast Track BOT Project. Enron agreed to supply a power station to NPC and transfer its
plant to the latter after ten (10) years of operation. Section 11.02 of the BOT Agreement
provided that NPC shall be responsible for the payment of all taxes that may be imposed on the
power station, except income taxes and permit fees. Subsequently, Enron assigned its obligation
under the BOT Agreement to petitioner Batangas Power Corporation (BPC). On September 23,
1992, the BOI issued a certificate of registration to BPC as a pioneer enterprise entitled to a tax
holiday for a period of six (6) years. On October 12, 1998, Batangas City sent a letter to BPC
demanding payment of business taxes and penalties, commencing from the year 1994, BPC
refused to pay, citing its tax-exempt status as a pioneer enterprise for six (6) years under Section
133 (g) of the Local Government Code (LGC). The city’s tax claim was modified and demanded
payment of business taxes from BPC only for the years 1998-1999. BPC still refused to pay the
tax. It insisted that its 6-year tax holiday commenced from the date of its commercial operation
on July 16, 1993, not from the date of its BOI registration in September 1992. In the alternative,
BPC asserted that the city should collect the tax from the NPC as the latter assumed
responsibility for its payment under their BOT Agreement. On August 26, 1999, the NPC
intervened. While admitting assumption of BPC’s tax obligations under their BOT Agreement, NPC
refused to pay BPC’s business tax as it allegedly constituted an indirect tax on NPC which is a
tax-exempt corporation under its Charter. BPC filed a petition for declaratory relief12 with the
Makati RTC against Batangas City and NPC. It alleged that under the BOT Agreement, NPC is
responsible for the payment of such taxes but as NPC is exempt from taxes, both the BPC and
NPC are not liable for its payment. Makati RTC dismissed the petition and held that: (1) BPC is
liable to pay business taxes to the city; (2) NPC’s tax exemption was withdrawn with the passage
of R.A. No. 7160 (The Local Government Code); and, (3) the 6-year tax holiday granted to
pioneer business enterprises starts on the date of registration with the BOI as provided in Section
133 (g) of R.A. No. 7160, and not on the date of its actual business operations.
Issue: Whether or not NPC’s tax exemption privileges under its Charter were withdrawn by
Section 193 of the Local Government Code (LGC).
Held: Yes. The effect of the LGC on the tax exemption privileges of the NPC has already been
extensively discussed and settled in the recent case of National Power Corporation v. City of
Cabanatuan. In said case, this Court recognized the removal of the blanket exclusion of
government instrumentalities from local taxation as one of the most significant provisions of the
1991 LGC. Specifically, we stressed that Section 193 of the LGC, an express and general repeal of
all statutes granting exemptions from local taxes, withdrew the sweeping tax privileges previously
enjoyed by the NPC under its Charter.
The power to tax is no longer vested exclusively on Congress; local legislative bodies are now
given direct authority to levy taxes, fees and other charges pursuant to Article X, section 5 of the
1987 Constitution. The LGC is considered as the most revolutionary piece of legislation on local
autonomy, the LGC effectively deals with the fiscal constraints faced by LGUs. It widens the tax
g. Compare with:
h. Tax Remission/Condonation
Issue: Whether Surigao Consolidated may recover its tax payment in light of the condonation
made under a subsequent law, RA 81.
Held: RA 81, Section 1(d) provided that “all unpaid royalties, ad valorem or specific taxes on all
minerals mined from mining claims or concessions existing an din force on 1 January 1942, and
which minerals were lost by reason of war, of circumstance arising therefrom are condoned…”
The provision refers to the
condonation of unpaid taxes only. The condonation of a tax liability is equivalent and is in the
nature of taxexemption. Being so, it should be sustained only when expressed in explicit terms,
and it cannot be extended beyond the plain meaning of those terms. He who claims an
exemption from his share of the common burden of taxation must justify his claim by showing t
hat the Legislature intended to exempt him. The company failed to show any portion of the law
that explicitly provided for a refund of those taxpayers who had paid their taxes on the items.
CIR assails the CA decision which affirmed CTA, ordering CIR to desist from collecting the 1985
deficiency income, branch profit remittance and contractor’s taxes from Marubeni Corp after
finding the latter to have properly availed of the tax amnesty under EO 41 & 64, as amended.
Marubeni, a Japanese corporation, engaged in general import and export trading, financing and
construction, is duly registered in the Philippines with Manila branch office. CIR examined the
Manila branch’s books of accounts for fiscal year ending March 1985, and found that respondent
had undeclared income from contracts with NDC and Philphos for construction of a wharf/port
complex and ammonia storage complex respectively.
On Aug 2, 1986, EO 41 declared a tax amnesty for unpaid income taxes for 1981-85, and that
taxpayers who wished to avail this should on or before Oct 31, 1986. Marubeni filed its tax
amnesty return on Oct 30, 1986.
On Nov 17, 1986, EO 64 expanded EO 41’s scope to include estate and donor’s taxes under Title
3 and business tax under Chap 2, Title 5 of NIRC, extended the period of availment to Dec 15,
1986 and stated those who already availed amnesty under EO 41 should file an amended return
to avail of the new benefits. Marubeni filed a supplemental tax amnesty return on Dec 15, 1986.
CTA found that Marubeni properly availed of the tax amnesty and deemed cancelled the
deficiency taxes. CA affirmed on appeal.
Issue:
Held:
Yes.
1. On date of effectivity
CIR claims Marubeni is disqualified from the tax amnesty because it falls under the exception in
Sec 4b of EO 41:
“Sec. 4. Exceptions.—The following taxpayers may not avail themselves of the amnesty herein
granted: xxx b) Those with income tax cases already filed in Court as of the effectivity hereof;”
Petitioner argues that at the time respondent filed for income tax amnesty on Oct 30, 1986, a
case had already been filed and was pending before the CTA and Marubeni therefore fell under
the exception. However, the point of reference is the date of effectivity of EO 41 and that the
filing of income tax cases must have been made before and as of its effectivity.
EO 41 took effect on Aug 22, 1986. The case questioning the 1985 deficiency was filed with CTA
on Sept 26, 1986. When EO 41 became effective, the case had not yet been filed. Marubeni does
not fall in the exception and is thus, not disqualified from availing of the amnesty under EO 41
for taxes on income and branch profit remittance.
The difficulty herein is with respect to the contractor’s tax assessment (business tax) and
respondent’s availment of the amnesty under EO 64, which expanded EO 41’s coverage. When
EO 64 took effect on Nov 17, 1986, it did not provide for exceptions to the coverage of the
amnesty for business, estate and donor’s taxes. Instead, Section 8 said EO provided that:
“Section 8. The provisions of Executive Orders Nos. 41 and 54 which are not contrary to or
inconsistent with this amendatory Executive Order shall remain in full force and effect.”
Due to the EO 64 amendment, Sec 4b cannot be construed to refer to EO 41 and its date of
effectivity. The general rule is that an amendatory act operates prospectively. It may not be
given a retroactive effect unless it is so provided expressly or by necessary implication and no
vested right or obligations of contract are thereby impaired.
2. On situs of taxation
Marubeni contends that assuming it did not validly avail of the amnesty, it is still not liable for the
deficiency tax because the income from the projects came from the “Offshore Portion” as
opposed to “Onshore Portion”. It claims all materials and equipment in the contract under the
“Offshore Portion” were manufactured and completed in Japan, not in the Philippines, and are
therefore not subject to Philippine taxes.
CIR argues that since the two agreements are turn-key, they call for the supply of both materials
and services to the client, they are contracts for a piece of work and are indivisible. The situs of
the two projects is in the Philippines, and the materials provided and services rendered were all
done and completed within the territorial jurisdiction of the Philippines. Accordingly, respondent’s
entire receipts from the contracts, including its receipts from the Offshore Portion, constitute
income from Philippine sources. The total gross receipts covering both labor and materials should
be subjected to contractor’s tax (a tax on the exercise of a privilege of selling services or labor
rather than a sale on products).
Marubeni, however, was able to sufficiently prove in trial that not all its work was performed in
the Philippines because some of them were completed in Japan (and in fact subcontracted) in
accordance with the provisions of the contracts. All services for the design, fabrication,
engineering and manufacture of the materials and equipment under Japanese Yen Portion I were
made and completed in Japan. These services were rendered outside Philippines’ taxing
jurisdiction and are therefore not subject to contractor’s tax. Petition denied.
Issue:
Is AIA disqualified from availing itself of the Tax Amnesty under Section 8 (a) of RA 9480?
Held:
No. Under Section 8 (a) of the RA 9480 withholding agents with respect to their withholding tax
liabilities shall be disqualified to avail of the tax amnesty. In this case, AIA was not being
assessed
as withholding agent that failed to withhold or remit the deficiency VAT and excise tax but as a
taxpayer who is directly liable for the said taxes. Moreover, RA 9480 does not exclude from its
coverage taxpayers operating within special economic zones. Hence, AIA is qualified to avail of
the
Tax Amnesty under RA 9480.
Issue: Whether the margin fees may be considered ordinary and necessary expenses when paid.
Issue: Whether the expropriation payment may compensate for the real
estate taxes due.
Held: There can be no off-setting of taxes against the claims that the
taxpayer may have against the government. A person canot refuse to pay a
tax on the ground that the government owes him an amount equal to or
greater than the tax being collected. The collection of a tax annot
await the results of a lawsuit agianst the government. Internal revenue
taxes cannot be the subject of compensation. The Government and the
taxpayer are not mutually creditors and debtors of each other under
Article 1278 of the Civil Code and a claim of taxes is not such a debt,
demand, contract or judgment as is allowed to be set-off.
- Philex Mining v. CIR, 294 SCRA 687
FACTS:
The Court of Tax Appeals ordered Philex to pay the amount of P110, 677,668.52 as
excise tax liability for the period from the 2nd quarter of 1991 to the 2nd quarter of 1992 plus
20% annual interest from August 6, 1994 until fully paid.
Philex refused to pay and argued that it had pending claims for VAT input credit/refund
for the taxes it paid for the years 1989-1991 in the amount of P119,977,037.02 plus interest and
therefore should be applied against the said excise tax liabilities in a manner of a set-off or legal
compensation.
ISSUE:
WON taxes could be the subject of a set-off or legal compensation?
RULING:
No. Taxes could not be the subject of a set-off or legal compensation for the simple
reason that the government and the taxpayer are not mutual creditors and debtors of each other.
Claims for taxes are neither debts nor contracts. A taxpayer cannot refuse to pay his taxes
when they fall due simply because he has a claim against the government that the collection of
the tax is contingent on the result of the lawsuit it filed against the government. In the case at bar,
the claims of Philex for VAT refund is still pending litigation. Moreover, taxes are the lifeblood
of the government and should be collected without unnecessary hindrance.