Soriano v. Secretary of Finance
Soriano v. Secretary of Finance
Soriano v. Secretary of Finance
DOCTRINE:
There is no legal basis for the BIR to reintroduce the prorating of the new personal and additional
exemptions. Respondents cannot amend, by mere regulation, the laws they administer. To do so would
violate the principle of non-delegability of legislative powers. It cannot even be justified under the exception
to the canon of non-delegability. The delegation would fail the two accepted tests for a valid delegation of
legislative power; the completeness test and the sufficient standard test.
o Respondents went beyond enforcement of the law, given the absence of a provision in R.A. 9504
mandating the prorated application of the new amounts of personal and additional exemptions for
2008.
o Even assuming that the law intended a prorated application, there are no parameters set forth in
R.A. 9504 that would delimit the legislative power surrendered by Congress to the delegate.
The amendment is silent on whether compensation-related benefits exceeding the P30,000 threshold would
make an MWE lose exemption. R.A. 9504 has given definite criteria for what constitutes an MWE, and R.R.
10-2008 cannot change this.
An administrative agency may not enlarge, alter or restrict a provision of law. It cannot add to the
requirements provided by law. To do so constitutes lawmaking, which is generally reserved for
Congress.
CIR v. Fortune Tobacco: 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 because any resulting discrepancy between the two will always be resolved in favor of the
basic law.
ACTION BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT: Consolidated Petitions for Certiorari, Prohibition and Mandamus under
Rule 65 of the 1997 Revised Rules of Court; to nullify certain provisions of Revenue Regulations No. (RR) 10-2008
Summary
FACTS:
On June 17, 2008, RA 9504 was approved and signed into law by President Arroyo. On Sept 24, 2008, the BIR
issued RR 10-2008, dated 08 July 2008, implementing the provisions of R.A. 9504. Petitioners assail the subject
RR as an unauthorized departure from the legislative intent of R.A. 9504. The regulation allegedly restricts the
implementation of the minimum wage earners’ (MWE) income tax exemption only to the period starting from 6 July
2008, instead of applying the exemption to the entire year 2008. They further challenge the BIR’s adoption of the
prorated application of the new set of personal and additional exemptions for taxable year 2008. They also contest
the validity of the RR’s alleged imposition of a condition for the availment by MWEs of the exemption provided by
R.A. 9504. Supposedly, in the event they receive other benefits in excess of P30,000, they can no longer avail
themselves of that exemption. Petitioners contend that the law provides for the unconditional exemption of MWEs
from income tax and, thus, pray that the RR be nullified.
ISSUE/RATIO:
1. Whether the tax exemptions should be applied to the entire taxable year 2008 or prorated,
applying only from July 6 – ENTIRE TAXABLE YEAR 2008 because it was a piece of social legislation
intended to afford immediate tax relief to MWEs, particularly due to increase in prices of goods.
R.A. 9504 as a piece of social legislation clearly intended to afford immediate tax relief to
individual taxpayers, particularly low-income compensation earners. Indeed, if R.A. 9504 was to
take effect beginning taxable year 2009 or half of the year 2008 only, then the intent of Congress
to address the increase in the cost of living in 2008 would have been negated. In the case of
Whether the increased personal and additional exemptions provided by RA 9504 should be applied to the
entire taxable year 2008 or pro-rated, considering that RA 9504 took effect only on July 6, 2008?
The personal and additional exemptions in RA 9504 should be applied to the entire taxable year 2008.
Umali is applicable.
Umali: Congress enacted RA 7167 amounts of basic personal and additional exemptions given to individual
income taxpayers were adjusted to the poverty threshold level. Issue posed was whether the increased personal
and additional exemptions could be applied to compensation income earned or received during calendar year 1991,
given that R.A. 7167 came into law only on 30 January 1992, when taxable year 1991 had already closed. Court
said yes—that the increased exemptions were already available on or before 15 April 1992, the date for the filing of
individual income tax returns. Law itself provided that the new set of personal and additional exemptions would be
immediately available upon its effectivity. While R.A. 7167 had not yet become effective during calendar year 1991,
the Court found that it was a piece of social legislation that was in part intended to alleviate the economic plight of
the lower-income taxpayers.
That the poverty threshold level is the poverty threshold level at the time RA 7167 was enacted by
Congress, not poverty threshold levels in future, at which time there may be need of further adjustments in
personal exemptions. The act is a social legislation intended to alleviate in part the present economic
plight of the lower income taxpayers. It is intended to remedy the inadequacy of the heretofore existing
personal and additional exemptions for individual taxpayers.
These exemptions are available upon the filing of personal income tax returns which is done not later than
the 15th day of April after the end of a calendar year. Under RA 7167, which became effective on Jan 30,
1992, the increased exemptions are literally available on or before April 15, 1992 (though not before Jan
30, 1992). But these increased exemptions can be available on 15 April 1992 only in respect of
compensation income earned or received during the calendar year 1991.
The personal exemptions as increased by Rep. Act 7167 cannot be regarded as available only in respect
of compensation income received during 1992, as the implementing Revenue Regulations No. 1-92
purport to provide. Revenue Regulations No. 1-92 would in effect postpone the availability of the increased
exemptions to 1 January-15 April 1993, and thus literally defer the effectivity of Rep. Act 7167 to 1 January
1993.
RA 9504, like RA 7167 in Umali, was a piece of social legislation clearly intended to afford immediate tax
relief to individual taxpayers, particularly low-income compensation earners.
Following Umali, the test is whether the new set of personal and additional exemptions was available at
the time of the filing of the income tax return. While the status of the individual taxpayers is determined at
the close of the taxable year, their personal and additional exemptions—and consequently the computation
of their taxable income—are reckoned when the tax becomes due, and not while the income is being
earned or received.
The new set of personal and additional exemptions, adjusted as a form of social legislation to
address the prevailing poverty threshold, should be given effect at the most opportune time as the
Court ruled in Umali.
That the MWE exemption is available for the entire taxable year 2008 is premised on the fact of one’s status
as an MWE; whether the employee during the entire year of 2008 was an MWE.
When the wages received exceed the minimum wage anytime during the taxable year, the employee
necessarily loses the MWE qualification. Therefore, wages become taxable as the employee ceased to be
an MWE. But the exemption of the employee from tax on the income previously earned as an MWE
remains.
Even beyond 2008, it is therefore possible for one employee to be exempt early in the year for being an
MWE for that period, and subsequently become taxable in the middle of the same year with respect to the
compensation income, as when the pay is increased higher than the minimum wage.
When one is an MWE during a part of the year and later earns higher than the minimum wage and
becomes a non-MWE, only earnings for that period when one is a non-MWE is subject to tax. It also
The government’s argument that the RR avoids a tax distortion has no merit.
Respondents’ Argument: MWE must be treated equally as other individual compensation income
earners "when their compensation does not warrant exemption under R.A. No. 9504. Otherwise, there
would be gross inequity between and among individual income taxpayers."
Court: Respondents are venturing into policy-making, a function that properly belongs to Congress.
Respondents cannot interfere with the wisdom of R.A. 9504. They must respect and implement it as
enacted.
Indeed, there is a distortion, one that RR 10-2008 actually engenders. While respondents insist
that MWEs who are earning purely compensation income will lose their MWE exemption the
moment they receive benefits in excess of P30,000, RR 10-2008 does not withdraw the MWE
SO ORDERED.