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TAXATION CASES |1

1. Hilado vs CIR the meaning of said Act which he is entitled to deduct as a loss in his return
for 1951. This claim is untenable.
[G.R. No. L-9408. October 31, 1956.] To begin with, assuming that said a mount represents a portion of the 75%
of his war damage claim which was not paid, the same would not be
EMILIO Y. HILADO, Petitioner, vs. THE COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL
deductible as a loss in 1951 because, according to Petitioner, the last
REVENUE and THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS, Respondents. 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
DECISION deduction from his 1950 gross income. In the second place, said amount
BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.: 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
On March 31, 1952, Petitioner filed his income tax return for 1951 with the matter of right, but is dependent merely upon the generosity and
treasurer of Bacolod City wherein he claimed, among other things, the magnanimity of the U. S. government. Note that, as of the end of 1945,
amount of P12,837.65 as a deductible item from his gross income pursuant there was absolutely no law under which Petitioner could claim
to General Circular No. V-123 issued by the Collector of Internal Revenue. compensation for the destruction of his properties during the battle for the
This circular was issued pursuant to certain rules laid down by the liberation of the Philippines. And under the Philippine Rehabilitation Act of
Secretary of Finance On the basis of said return, an assessment notice 1946, the payments of claims by the War Damage Commission merely
demanding the payment of P9,419 was sent to Petitioner, who paid the tax depended upon its discretion to be exercised in the manner it may see fit,
in monthly installments, the last payment having been made on January 2, but the non-payment of which cannot give rise to any enforceable right, for,
1953. under said Act, “All findings of the Commission concerning the amount of
Meanwhile, on August 30, 1952, the Secretary of Finance, through the loss or damage sustained, the cause of such loss or damage, the persons to
Collector of Internal Revenue, issued General Circular No. V-139 which not whom compensation pursuant to this title is payable, and the value of the
only revoked and declared void his general Circular No. V- 123 but laid property lost or damaged, shall be conclusive and shall not be reviewable
down the rule that losses of property which occurred during the period of by any court”. (section 113).
World War II from fires, storms, shipwreck or other casualty, or from It is true that under the authority of section 338 of the National Internal
robbery, theft, or embezzlement are deductible in the year of actual loss or Revenue Code the Secretary of Finance, in the exercise of his
destruction of said property. As a consequence, the amount of P12,837.65 administrative powers, caused the issuance of General Circular No. V-123
was disallowed as a deduction from the gross income of Petitioner for 1951 as an implementation or interpretative regulation of section 30 of the same
and the Collector of Internal Revenue demanded from him the payment of Code, under which the amount of P12,837.65 was allowed to be deducted
the sum of P3,546 as deficiency income tax for said year. When the petition “in the year the last installment was received with notice that no further
for reconsideration filed by Petitioner was denied, he filed a petition for payment would be made until the United States Congress makes further
review with the Court of Tax Appeals. In due time, this court rendered appropriation therefor”, but such circular was found later to be wrong and
decision affirming the assessment made by Respondent Collector of was revoked. Thus, when doubts arose as to the soundness or validity of
Internal Revenue. This is an appeal from said decision. such circular, the Secretary of Finance sought the advice of the Secretary of
It appears that Petitioner claimed in his 1951 income tax return the Justice who, accordingly, gave his opinion the pertinent portion of which
deduction of the sum of P12,837.65 as a loss consisting in a portion of his reads as follows:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
war damage claim which had been duly approved by the Philippine War “Yet it might be argued that war losses were not included as deductions for
Damage Commission under the Philippine Rehabilitation Act of 1946 but the year when they were sustained because the taxpayers had prospects
which was not paid and never has been paid pursuant to a notice served that losses would be compensated for by the United States Government;
upon him by said Commission that said part of his claim will not be paid chan roblesvirtualawlibrarythat since only uncompensated losses are
until the United States Congress should make further appropriation. He deductible, they had to wait until after the determination by the Philippine
claims that said amount of P12,837.65 represents a “business asset” within War Damage Commission as to the compensability in part or in whole of
TAXATION CASES |2

their war losses so that they could exclude from the deductions those (Joseph H. Beale, Cases on Conflict of Laws, III, Summary section 9, citing
compensated for by the said Commission; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryand Commonwealth vs. Chapman, 13 Met., 68.) As the same author says, in his
that, of necessity, such determination could be complete only much later Treatise on the Conflict of Laws (Cambridge, 1916, section
than in the year when the loss was sustained. This contention falls to the 131):chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary ‘There can be no break or interregnun in
ground when it is considered that the Philippine Rehabilitation Act which law. From the time the law comes into existence with the first-felt
authorized the payment by the United States Government of war losses corporateness of a primitive people it must last until the final
suffered by property owners in the Philippines was passed only on August disappearance of human society. Once created, it persists until a change
30, 1946, long after the losses were sustained. It cannot be said therefore, takes place, and when changed it continues in such changed condition until
that the property owners had any conclusive assurance during the years the next change and so forever. Conquest or colonization is impotent to
said losses were sustained, that the compensation was to be paid therefor. bring law to an end; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryinspite of change of
Whatever assurance they could have had, could have been based only on constitution, the law continues unchanged until the new sovereign by
some information less reliable and less conclusive than the passage of the legislative act creates a change.’“ (Co Kim Chan vs. Valdes Tan Keh and
Act itself. Hence, as diligent property owners, they should adopt the safest Dizon, 75 Phil., 113, 142-143.)
alternative by considering such losses deductible during the year when
It is likewise contended that the power to pass upon the validity of General
they were sustained.”
Circular No. V-123 is vested exclusively in our courts in view of the
In line with this opinion, the Secretary of Finance, through the Collector of principle of separation of powers and, therefore, the Secretary of Finance
Internal Revenue, issued General Circular No. V-139 which not only acted without valid authority in revoking it and approving in lieu thereof
revoked and declared void his previous Circular No. V — 123 but laid down General Circular No. V-139. It cannot be denied, however, that the Secretary
the rule that losses of property which occurred during the period of World of Finance is vested with authority to revoke, repeal or abrogate the acts or
War II from fires, storms, shipwreck or other casualty, or from robbery, previous rulings of his predecessor in office because the construction of a
theft, or embezzlement are deductible for income tax purposes in the year statute by those administering it is not binding on their successors if
of actual destruction of said property. We can hardly argue against this thereafter the latter become satisfied that a different construction should
opinion. Since we have already stated that the amount claimed does not be given. [Association of Clerical Employees vs. Brotherhood of Railways &
represent a “business asset” that may be deducted as a loss in 1951, it is Steamship Clerks, 85 F. (2d) 152, 109 A.L.R., 345.]
clear that the loss of the corresponding asset or property could only be
“When the Commissioner determined in 1937 that the Petitioner was not
deducted in the year it was actually sustained. This is in line with section
exempt and never had been, it was his duty to determine, assess and collect
30 (d) of the National Internal Revenue Code which prescribes that losses
the tax due for all years not barred by the statutes of limitation. The
sustained are allowable as deduction only within the corresponding
conclusion reached and announced by his predecessor in 1924 was not
taxable year.
binding upon him. It did not exempt the Petitioner from tax, This same
Petitioner’s contention that during the last war and as a consequence of point was decided in this way in Stanford University Bookstore, 29 B. T. A.,
enemy occupation in the Philippines “there was no taxable year” within the 1280; chan roblesvirtualawlibraryaffd., 83 Fed. (2d) 710.” (Southern
meaning of our internal revenue laws because during that period they Maryland Agricultural Fair Association vs. Commissioner of Internal
were unenforceable, is without merit. It is well known that our internal Revenue, 40 B. T. A., 549, 554).
revenue laws are not political in nature and as such were continued in
With regard to the contention that General Circular No. V-139 cannot be
force during the period of enemy occupation and in effect were actually
given retroactive effect because that would affect and obliterate the vested
enforced by the occupation government. As a matter of fact, income tax
right acquired by Petitioner under the previous circular, suffice it to say
returns were filed during that period and income tax payment were
that General Circular No. V-123, having been issued on a wrong
effected and considered valid and legal. Such tax laws are deemed to be the
construction of the law, cannot give rise to a vested right that can be
laws of the occupied territory and not of the occupying enemy.
invoked by a taxpayer. The reason is obvious:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary a
“Furthermore, it is a legal maxim, that excepting that of a political nature, vested right cannot spring from a wrong interpretation. This is too clear to
‘Law once established continues until changed by some competent require elaboration.
legislative power. It is not changed merely by change of sovereignty.’
TAXATION CASES |3

“It seems too clear for serious argument that an administrative officer the sum of P174,043.97 for alleged deficiency
cannot change a law enacted by Congress. A regulation that is merely an contractor's tax, and an assessment dated June 27, 1983
interpretation of the statute when once determined to have been in the sum of P1,141,837 for alleged deficiency income
erroneous becomes nullity. An erroneous construction of the law by the tax, both for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1978.
Treasury Department or the collector of internal revenue does not Denying said tax liabilities, private respondent sent
preclude or estop the government from collecting a tax which is legally petitioner a letter-protest and subsequently filed with
due.” (Ben Stocker, et al., 12 B. T. A., 1351.) the latter a memorandum contesting the validity of the
assessments.
“Art. 2254. — No vested or acquired right can arise from acts or omissions
On March 17, 1988, petitioner rendered a letter-
which are against the law or which infringe upon the rights of others.” decision canceling the assessment for deficiency income
(Article 2254, New Civil Code.)
tax but modifying the assessment for deficiency
Wherefore, the decision appealed from is affirmed Without contractor's tax by increasing the amount due to
pronouncement as to costs. P193,475.55. Unsatisfied, private respondent requested
2. CIR vs. CA for a reconsideration or reinvestigation of the modified
G.R. No. 115349 April 18, 1997 assessment. At the same time, it filed in the respondent
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner, court a petition for review of the said letter-decision of
vs. the petitioner. While the petition was pending before
THE COURT OF APPEALS, THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS and ATENEO the respondent court, petitioner issued a final decision
DE MANILA UNIVERSITY, respondents. dated August 3, 1988 reducing the assessment for
PANGANIBAN, J.: deficiency contractor's tax from P193,475.55 to
In conducting researches and studies of social organizations and cultural P46,516.41, exclusive of surcharge and interest.
values thru its Institute of Philippine Culture, is the Ateneo de Manila On July 12, 1993, the respondent court rendered the
University performing the work of an independent contractor and thus questioned decision which dispositively reads:
taxable within the purview of then Section 205 of the National Internal WHEREFORE, in view of the
Revenue Code levying a three percent contractor's tax? This question is foregoing, respondent's decision is
answer by the Court in the negative as it resolves this petition assailing the SET ASIDE. The deficiency
Decision 1 of the Respondent Court of Appeals 2 in CA-G.R. SP No. 31790 contractor's tax assessment in the
promulgated on April 27, 1994 affirming that of the Court of Tax Appeals. 3 amount of P46,516.41 exclusive of
The Antecedent Facts surcharge and interest for the fiscal
The antecedents as found by the Court of Appeals are reproduced year ended March 31, 1978 is hereby
hereinbelow, the same being largely undisputed by the parties. CANCELED. No pronouncement as to
Private respondent is a non-stock, non-profit cost.
educational institution with auxiliary units and SO ORDERED.
branches all over the Philippines. One such auxiliary Not in accord with said decision, petitioner has come to this Court
unit is the Institute of Philippine Culture (IPC), which via the present petition for review raising the following issues:
has no legal personality separate and distinct from that 1) WHETHER OR NOT PRIVATE
of private respondent. The IPC is a Philippine unit RESPONDENT FALLS UNDER THE
engaged in social science studies of Philippine society PURVIEW OF INDEPENDENT
and culture. Occasionally, it accepts sponsorships for its CONTRACTOR PURSUANT TO
research activities from international organizations, SECTION 205 OF THE TAX CODE; and
private foundations and government agencies. 2) WHETHER OR NOT PRIVATE
On July 8, 1983, private respondent received from RESPONDENT IS SUBJECT TO 3%
petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue a demand CONTRACTOR'S TAX UNDER
letter dated June 3, 1983, assessing private respondent SECTION 205 OF THE TAX CODE.
TAXATION CASES |4

The pertinent portions of Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue b. Individuals occupation tax under Section 12 of the
Code, as amended, provide: Local Tax Code (under the old Section 182 [b] of the Tax
Sec. 205. Contractor, proprietors or operators of Code); and
dockyards, and others. — A contractor's tax of three per c. Regional or area headquarters established in the
centum of the gross receipts is hereby imposed on the Philippines by multinational corporations, including
following: their alien executives, and which headquarters do not
xxx xxx xxx earn or derive income from the Philippines and which
(16) Business agents and other act as supervisory, communication and coordinating
independent contractors except centers for their affiliates, subsidiaries or branches in
persons, associations and the Asia Pacific Region (Section 205 of the Tax Code).
corporations under contract for Petitioner thus submits that since private respondent
embroidery and apparel for export, falls under the definition of an "independent contractor"
as well as their agents and and is not among the aforementioned exceptions,
contractors and except gross receipts private respondent is therefore subject to the 3%
of or from a pioneer industry contractor's tax imposed under the same Code. 4
registered with the Board of The Court of Appeals disagreed with the Petitioner Commissioner of
Investments under Republic Act No. Internal Revenue and affirmed the assailed decision of the Court of Tax
5186: Appeals. Unfazed, petitioner now asks us to reverse the CA through this
xxx xxx xxx petition for review.
The term "independent contractors" The Issues
include persons (juridical or natural) Petitioner submits before us the following issues:
not enumerated above (but not 1) Whether or not private respondent falls under the
including individuals subject to the purview of independent contractor pursuant to Section
occupation tax under Section 12 of 205 of the Tax Code.
the Local Tax Code) whose activity 2) Whether or not private respondent is subject to 3%
consists essentially of the sale of all contractor's tax under Section 205 of the Tax Code. 5
kinds of services for a fee regardless In fine, these may be reduced to a single issue: Is Ateneo de Manila
of whether or not the performance of University, through its auxiliary unit or branch — the Institute of
the service calls for the exercise or Philippine Culture — performing the work of an independent contractor
use of the physical or mental faculties and, thus, subject to the three percent contractor's tax levied by then
of such contractors or their Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue Code?
employees. The Court's Ruling
xxx xxx xxx The petition is unmeritorious.
Petitioner contends that the respondent court erred in Interpretation of Tax Laws
holding that private respondent is not an "independent The parts of then Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue Code
contractor" within the purview of Section 205 of the Tax germane to the case before us read:
Code. To petitioner, the term "independent contractor", Sec. 205. Contractors, proprietors or operators of
as defined by the Code, encompasses all kinds of dockyards, and others. — A contractor's tax of three per
services rendered for a fee and that the only exceptions centum of the gross receipts is hereby imposed on the
are the following: following:
a. Persons, association and corporations under contract xxx xxx xxx
for embroidery and apparel for export and gross (16) Business agents and other independent
receipts of or from pioneer industry registered with the contractors, except persons, associations and
Board of Investment under R.A. No. 5186; corporations under contract for embroidery and
TAXATION CASES |5

apparel for export, as well as their agents and imposing taxes and other burdens on the populace, before asking Ateneo to
contractors, and except gross receipts of or from a prove its exemption therefrom. The Court takes this occasion to reiterate
pioneer industry registered with the Board of the hornbook doctrine in the interpretation of tax laws that "(a) statute
Investments under the provisions of Republic Act No. will not be construed as imposing a tax unless it does so clearly, expressly,
5186; and unambiguously . . . (A) tax cannot be imposed without clear and express
xxx xxx xxx words for that purpose. Accordingly, the general rule of requiring
The term "independent contractors" include persons adherence to the letter in construing statutes applies with peculiar strictness
(juridical or natural) not enumerated above (but not to tax laws and the provisions of a taxing act are not to be extended by
including individuals subject to the occupation tax implication." 8 Parenthetically, in answering the question of who is subject
under Section 12 of the Local Tax Code) whose activity to tax statutes, it is basic that "in case of doubt, such statutes are to be
consists essentially of the sale of all kinds of services for construed most strongly against the government and in favor of the
a fee regardless of whether or not the performance of subjects or citizens because burdens are not to be imposed nor presumed
the service calls for the exercise or use of the physical or to be imposed beyond what statutes expressly and clearly import." 9
mental faculties of such contractors or their employees. To fall under its coverage, Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue
The term "independent contractor" shall not include Code requires that the independent contractor be engaged in the business
regional or area headquarters established in the of selling its services. Hence, to impose the three percent contractor's tax
Philippines by multinational corporations, including on Ateneo's Institute of Philippine Culture, it should be sufficiently proven
their alien executives, and which headquarters do not that the private respondent is indeed selling its services for a fee in pursuit
earn or derive income from the Philippines and which of an independent business. And it is only after private respondent has
act as supervisory, communications and coordinating been found clearly to be subject to the provisions of Sec. 205 that the
centers for their affiliates, subsidiaries or branches in question of exemption therefrom would arise. Only after such coverage is
the Asia-Pacific Region. shown does the rule of construction — that tax exemptions are to be
The term "gross receipts" means all amounts received strictly construed against the taxpayer — come into play, contrary to
by the prime or principal contractor as the total contract petitioner's position. This is the main line of reasoning of the Court of Tax
price, undiminished by amount paid to the Appeals in its decision, 10 which was affirmed by the CA.
subcontractor, shall be excluded from the taxable gross The Ateneo de Manila University Did Not Contract
receipts of the subcontractor. for the Sale of the Service of its Institute of Philippine Culture
Petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue contends that Private After reviewing the records of this case, we find no evidence that Ateneo's
Respondent Ateneo de Manila University "falls within the definition" of an Institute of Philippine Culture ever sold its services for a fee to anyone or
independent contractor and "is not one of those mentioned as excepted"; was ever engaged in a business apart from and independently of the
hence, it is properly a subject of the three percent contractor's tax levied by academic purposes of the university.
the foregoing provision of law. 6 Petitioner states that the "term Stressing that "it is not the Ateneo de Manila University per se which is
'independent contractor' is not specifically defined so as to delimit the being taxed," Petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue contends that
scope thereof, so much so that any person who . . . renders physical and "the tax is due on its activity of conducting researches for a fee. The tax is due
mental service for a fee, is now indubitably considered an independent on the gross receipts made in favor of IPC pursuant to the contracts the
contractor liable to 3% contractor's tax." 7 According to petitioner, Ateneo latter entered to conduct researches for the benefit primarily of its clients.
has the burden of proof to show its exemption from the coverage of the law. The tax is imposed on the exercise of a taxable activity. . . . [T]he sale of
We disagree. Petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue erred in services of private respondent is made under a contract and the various
applying the principles of tax exemption without first applying the well- contracts entered into between private respondent and its clients are
settled doctrine of strict interpretation in the imposition of taxes. It is almost of the same terms, showing, among others, the compensation and
obviously both illogical and impractical to determine who are exempted terms of payment." 11 (Emphasis supplied.)
without first determining who are covered by the aforesaid provision. The In theory, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue may be correct. However,
Commissioner should have determined first if private respondent was the records do not show that Ateneo's IPC in fact contracted to sell its
covered by Section 205, applying the rule of strict interpretation of laws research services for a fee. Clearly then, as found by the Court of Appeals
TAXATION CASES |6

and the Court of Tax Appeals, petitioner's theory is inapplicable to the are subject to private respondent's terms and conditions,
established factual milieu obtaining in the instant case. among which are, that the research is confined to topics
In the first place, the petitioner has presented no evidence to prove its bare consistent with the private respondent's academic
contention that, indeed, contracts for sale of services were ever entered agenda; that no proprietary or commercial purpose
into by the private respondent. As appropriately pointed out by the latter: research is done; and that private respondent retains not
An examination of the Commissioner's Written Formal only the absolute right to publish but also the ownership
Offer of Evidence in the Court of Tax Appeals shows that of the results of the research conducted by the IPC. Quite
only the following documentary evidence was clearly, the aforementioned terms and conditions belie
presented: the allegation that private respondent is a contractor or
Exhibit 1 BIR letter of authority no. 331844 is engaged in business.
2 Examiner's Field For another, it bears stressing that private respondent is
Audit Report a non-stock, non-profit educational corporation. The
3 Adjustments to fact that it accepted sponsorship for IPC's unfunded
Sales/Receipts projects is merely incidental. For, the main function of
4 Letter-decision the IPC is to undertake research projects under the
of BIR academic agenda of the private respondent. Moreover
Commissioner the records do not show that in accepting sponsorship
Bienvenido A. Tan of research work, IPC realized profits from such work.
Jr. On the contrary, the evidence shows that for about 30
None of the foregoing evidence even comes close to years, IPC had continuously operated at a loss, which
purport to be contracts between private respondent and means that sponsored funds are less than actual
third parties. 12 expenses for its research projects. That IPC has been
Moreover, the Court of Tax Appeals accurately and correctly declared that operating at a loss loudly bespeaks of the fact that
the " funds received by the Ateneo de Manila University are technically not a education and not profit is the motive for undertaking
fee. They may however fall as gifts or donations which are tax-exempt" as the research projects.
shown by private respondent's compliance with the requirement of Section Then, too, granting arguendo that IPC made profits from
123 of the National Internal Revenue Code providing for the exemption of the sponsored research projects, the fact still remains
such gifts to an educational institution. 13 that there is no proof that part of such earnings or
Respondent Court of Appeals elucidated on the ruling of the Court of Tax profits was ever distributed as dividends to any
Appeals: stockholder, as in fact none was so distributed because
To our mind, private respondent hardly fits into the they accrued to the benefit of the private respondent
definition of an "independent contractor". which is a non-profit educational institution. 14
For one, the established facts show that IPC, as a unit of Therefore, it is clear that the funds received by Ateneo's Institute of
the private respondent, is not engaged in business. Philippine Culture are not given in the concept of a fee or price in exchange
Undisputedly, private respondent is mandated by law to for the performance of a service or delivery of an object. Rather, the
undertake research activities to maintain its university amounts are in the nature of an endowment or donation given by IPC's
status. In fact, the research activities being carried out benefactors solely for the purpose of sponsoring or funding the research
by the IPC is focused not on business or profit but on with no strings attached. As found by the two courts below, such
social sciences studies of Philippine society and culture. sponsorships are subject to IPC's terms and conditions. No proprietary or
Since it can only finance a limited number of IPC's commercial research is done, and IPC retains the ownership of the results
research projects, private respondent occasionally of the research, including the absolute right to publish the same. The
accepts sponsorship for unfunded IPC research projects copyrights over the results of the research are owned by
from international organizations, private foundations Ateneo and, consequently, no portion thereof may be reproduced without
and governmental agencies. However, such sponsorships its permission. 15 The amounts given to IPC, therefore, may not be deemed,
TAXATION CASES |7

it bears stressing as fees or gross receipts that can be subjected to the be judged by their effective teaching, scholarly
three percent contractor's tax. publications and research activities published in its
It is also well to stress that the questioned transactions of Ateneo's school journal as well as their leadership activities in the
Institute of Philippine Culture cannot be deemed either as a contract of profession.
sale or a contract of a piece of work. "By the contract of sale, one of the (f) The institution must show evidence of adequate and
contracting parties obligates himself to transfer the ownership of and to stable financial resources and support, a reasonable
deliver a determinate thing, and the other to pay therefor a price certain in portion of which should be devoted to institutional
money or its equivalent." 16 By its very nature, a contract of sale requires a development and research. (emphasis supplied)
transfer of ownership. Thus, Article 1458 of the Civil Code "expressly xxx xxx xxx
makes the obligation to transfer ownership as an essential element of the 32. University status may be withdrawn, after due
contract of sale, following modern codes, such as the German and the notice and hearing, for failure to maintain satisfactorily
Swiss. Even in the absence of this express requirement, however, most the standards and requirements therefor. 20
writers, including Sanchez Roman, Gayoso, Valverde, Ruggiero, Colin and Petitioner's contention that it is the Institute of Philippine Culture that is
Capitant, have considered such transfer of ownership as the primary being taxed and not the Ateneo is patently erroneous because the former is
purpose of sale. Perez and Alguer follow the same view, stating that the not an independent juridical entity that is separate and distinct form the
delivery of the thing does not mean a mere physical transfer, but is a means latter.
of transmitting ownership. Transfer of title or an agreement to transfer it Factual Findings and Conclusions of the Court of Tax Appeals
for a price paid or promised to be paid is the essence of sale." 17 In the case Affirmed by the Court of Appeals Generally Conclusive
of a contract for a piece of work, "the contractor binds himself to execute a In addition, we reiterate that the "Court of Tax Appeals is a highly
piece of work for the employer, in consideration of a certain price or specialized body specifically created for the purpose of reviewing tax cases.
compensation. . . . If the contractor agrees to produce the work from Through its expertise, it is undeniably competent to determine the issue of
materials furnished by him, he shall deliver the thing produced to the whether" 21 Ateneo de Manila University may be deemed a subject of the
employer and transfer dominion over the thing, . . ." 18 Ineludably, whether three percent contractor's tax "through the evidence presented before it."
the contract be one of sale or one for a piece of work, a transfer of Consequently, "as a matter of principle, this Court will not set aside the
ownership is involved and a party necessarily walks away with an object. 19 conclusion reached by . . . the Court of Tax Appeals which is, by the very
In the case at bench, it is clear from the evidence on record that there was nature of its function, dedicated exclusively to the study and consideration
no sale either of objects or services because, as adverted to earlier, there of tax problems and has necessarily developed an expertise on the subject
was no transfer of ownership over the research data obtained or the unless there has been an abuse or improvident exercise of authority . . ." 22
results of research projects undertaken by the Institute of Philippine This point becomes more evident in the case before us where the findings
Culture. and conclusions of both the Court of Tax Appeals and the Court of Appeals
Furthermore, it is clear that the research activity of the Institute of appear untainted by any abuse of authority, much less grave abuse of
Philippine Culture is done in pursuance of maintaining Ateneo's university discretion. Thus, we find the decision of the latter affirming that of the
status and not in the course of an independent business of selling such former free from any palpable error.
research with profit in mind. This is clear from a reading of the regulations Public Service, Not Profit, is the Motive
governing universities: The records show that the Institute of Philippine Culture conducted its
31. In addition to the legal requisites an institution must research activities at a huge deficit of P1,624,014.00 as shown in its
meet, among others, the following requirements before statements of fund and disbursements for the period 1972 to 1985. 23 In
an application for university status shall be considered: fact, it was Ateneo de Manila University itself that had funded the research
xxx xxx xxx projects of the institute, and it was only when Ateneo could no longer
(e) The institution must undertake research and operate produce the needed funds that the institute sought funding from outside.
with a competent qualified staff at least three graduate The testimony of Ateneo's Director for Accounting Services, Ms. Leonor
departments in accordance with the rules and standards Wijangco, provides significant insight on the academic and nonprofit
for graduate education. One of the departments shall be nature of the institute's research activities done in furtherance of the
science and technology. The competence of the staff shall university's purposes, as follows:
TAXATION CASES |8

Q Now it was testified to earlier by Miss Thelma Padero This is a petition for certiorari and mandamus against the Judge of the
(Office Manager of the Institute of Philippine Culture) Court of First Instance of Leyte, Ron. Lorenzo C. Garlitos, presiding, seeking
that as far as grants from sponsored research it is to annul certain orders of the court and for an order in this Court directing
possible that the grant sometimes is less than the actual the respondent court below to execute the judgment in favor of the
cost. Will you please tell us in this case when the actual Government against the estate of Walter Scott Price for internal revenue
cost is a lot less than the grant who shoulders the taxes.
additional cost?
A The University. It appears that in Melecio R. Domingo vs. Hon. Judge S. C. Moscoso, G.R. No.
Q Now, why is this done by the University? L-14674, January 30, 1960, this Court declared as final and executory the
A Because of our faculty development program as a order for the payment by the estate of the estate and inheritance taxes,
university, because a university has to have its own charges and penalties, amounting to P40,058.55, issued by the Court of
research institute. 24 First Instance of Leyte in, special proceedings No. 14 entitled "In the
So, why is it that Ateneo continues to operate and conduct researches matter of the Intestate Estate of the Late Walter Scott Price." In order to
through its Institute of Philippine Culture when it undisputedly loses not enforce the claims against the estate the fiscal presented a petition dated
an insignificant amount in the process? The plain and simple answer is that June 21, 1961, to the court below for the execution of the judgment. The
private respondent is not a contractor selling its services for a fee but an petition was, however, denied by the court which held that the execution is
academic institution conducting these researches pursuant to its not justifiable as the Government is indebted to the estate under
commitments to education and, ultimately, to public service. For the administration in the amount of P262,200. The orders of the court below
institute to have tenaciously continued operating for so long despite its dated August 20, 1960 and September 28, 1960, respectively, are as
accumulation of significant losses, we can only agree with both the Court of follows:
Tax Appeals and the Court of Appeals that "education and not profit is
[IPC's] motive for undertaking the research Atty. Benedicto submitted a copy of the contract between Mrs. Simeona K.
projects." 25 Price, Administratrix of the estate of her late husband Walter Scott Price
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is DENIED and the and Director Zoilo Castrillo of the Bureau of Lands dated September 19,
assailed Decision of the Court of Appeals is hereby AFFIRMED in full. 1956 and acknowledged before Notary Public Salvador V. Esguerra, legal
SO ORDERED. adviser in Malacanñ ang to Executive Secretary De Leon dated December 14,
respects, with costs against the defendant-appellant. So ordered. 1956, the note of His Excellency, Pres. Carlos P. Garcia, to Director Castrillo
dated August 2, 1958, directing the latter to pay to Mrs. Price the sum
3. Domingo vs. Hon. Garlitos ofP368,140.00, and an extract of page 765 of Republic Act No. 2700
G.R. No. L-18994 June 29, 1963 appropriating the sum of P262.200.00 for the payment to the Leyte
Cadastral Survey, Inc., represented by the administratrix Simeona K. Price,
MELECIO R. DOMINGO, as Commissioner of Internal Revenue, petitioner, as directed in the above note of the President. Considering these facts, the
vs. Court orders that the payment of inheritance taxes in the sum of
HON. LORENZO C. GARLITOS, in his capacity as Judge of the Court of First P40,058.55 due the Collector of Internal Revenue as ordered paid by this
Instance of Leyte, Court on July 5, 1960 in accordance with the order of the Supreme Court
and SIMEONA K. PRICE, as Administratrix of the Intestate Estate of the late promulgated July 30, 1960 in G.R. No. L-14674, be deducted from the
Walter Scott Price, respondents. amount of P262,200.00 due and payable to the Administratrix Simeona K.
Price, in this estate, the balance to be paid by the Government to her
Office of the Solicitor General and Atty. G. H. Mantolino for petitioner. without further delay. (Order of August 20, 1960)
Benedicto and Martinez for respondents.
The Court has nothing further to add to its order dated August 20, 1960
LABRADOR, J.: and it orders that the payment of the claim of the Collector of Internal
Revenue be deferred until the Government shall have paid its accounts to
the administratrix herein amounting to P262,200.00. It may not be amiss
TAXATION CASES |9

to repeat that it is only fair for the Government, as a debtor, to its accounts the court for an order to require the administrator to pay the amount due
to its citizens-creditors before it can insist in the prompt payment of the from the estate and required to be paid.
latter's account to it, specially taking into consideration that the amount
due to the Government draws interests while the credit due to the present Another ground for denying the petition of the provincial fiscal is the fact
state does not accrue any interest. (Order of September 28, 1960) that the court having jurisdiction of the estate had found that the claim of
the estate against the Government has been recognized and an amount of
The petition to set aside the above orders of the court below and for the P262,200 has already been appropriated for the purpose by a
execution of the claim of the Government against the estate must be denied corresponding law (Rep. Act No. 2700). Under the above circumstances,
for lack of merit. The ordinary procedure by which to settle claims of both the claim of the Government for inheritance taxes and the claim of the
indebtedness against the estate of a deceased person, as an inheritance tax, intestate for services rendered have already become overdue and
is for the claimant to present a claim before the probate court so that said demandable is well as fully liquidated. Compensation, therefore, takes
court may order the administrator to pay the amount thereof. To such place by operation of law, in accordance with the provisions of Articles
effect is the decision of this Court in Aldamiz vs. Judge of the Court of First 1279 and 1290 of the Civil Code, and both debts are extinguished to the
Instance of Mindoro, G.R. No. L-2360, Dec. 29, 1949, thus: concurrent amount, thus:

. . . a writ of execution is not the proper procedure allowed by the Rules of ART. 1200. When all the requisites mentioned in article 1279 are present,
Court for the payment of debts and expenses of administration. The proper compensation takes effect by operation of law, and extinguished both debts
procedure is for the court to order the sale of personal estate or the sale or to the concurrent amount, eventhough the creditors and debtors are not
mortgage of real property of the deceased and all debts or expenses of aware of the compensation.
administrator and with the written notice to all the heirs legatees and
devisees residing in the Philippines, according to Rule 89, section 3, and It is clear, therefore, that the petitioner has no clear right to execute the
Rule 90, section 2. And when sale or mortgage of real estate is to be made, judgment for taxes against the estate of the deceased Walter Scott Price.
the regulations contained in Rule 90, section 7, should be complied Furthermore, the petition for certiorari and mandamus is not the proper
with.1aä wphïä1.nñ eä t remedy for the petitioner. Appeal is the remedy.

Execution may issue only where the devisees, legatees or heirs have The petition is, therefore, dismissed, without costs.
entered into possession of their respective portions in the estate prior to
settlement and payment of the debts and expenses of administration and it 1. Francia vs. IAC
is later ascertained that there are such debts and expenses to be paid, in
which case "the court having jurisdiction of the estate may, by order for G.R. No. L-67649 June 28, 1988
that purpose, after hearing, settle the amount of their several liabilities,
and order how much and in what manner each person shall contribute, ENGRACIO FRANCIA, petitioner,
and may issue execution if circumstances require" (Rule 89, section 6; see vs.
also Rule 74, Section 4; Emphasis supplied.) And this is not the instant INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT and HO FERNANDEZ, respondents.
case.

The legal basis for such a procedure is the fact that in the testate or
intestate proceedings to settle the estate of a deceased person, the GUTIERREZ, JR., J.:
properties belonging to the estate are under the jurisdiction of the court
and such jurisdiction continues until said properties have been distributed The petitioner invokes legal and equitable grounds to reverse the
among the heirs entitled thereto. During the pendency of the proceedings questioned decision of the Intermediate Appellate Court, to set aside the
all the estate is in custodia legis and the proper procedure is not to allow auction sale of his property which took place on December 5, 1977, and to
the sheriff, in case of the court judgment, to seize the properties but to ask allow him to recover a 203 square meter lot which was, sold at public
auction to Ho Fernandez and ordered titled in the latter's name.
TAXATION CASES |10

including the improvements thereon, subject to whatever encumbrances


The antecedent facts are as follows: appearing at the back of TCT No. 4739 (37795) and ordering the same TCT
No. 4739 (37795) cancelled.
Engracio Francia is the registered owner of a residential lot and a two-
story house built upon it situated at Barrio San Isidro, now District of Sta. (b) The plaintiff to pay defendant Ho Fernandez the sum of P1,000.00 as
Clara, Pasay City, Metro Manila. The lot, with an area of about 328 square attorney's fees. (p. 30, Record on Appeal)
meters, is described and covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 4739
(37795) of the Registry of Deeds of Pasay City. The Intermediate Appellate Court affirmed the decision of the lower court
in toto.
On October 15, 1977, a 125 square meter portion of Francia's property was
expropriated by the Republic of the Philippines for the sum of P4,116.00 Hence, this petition for review.
representing the estimated amount equivalent to the assessed value of the
aforesaid portion. Francia prefaced his arguments with the following assignments of grave
errors of law:
Since 1963 up to 1977 inclusive, Francia failed to pay his real estate taxes.
Thus, on December 5, 1977, his property was sold at public auction by the I
City Treasurer of Pasay City pursuant to Section 73 of Presidential Decree
No. 464 known as the Real Property Tax Code in order to satisfy a tax RESPONDENT INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT COMMITTED A GRAVE
delinquency of P2,400.00. Ho Fernandez was the highest bidder for the ERROR OF LAW IN NOT HOLDING PETITIONER'S OBLIGATION TO PAY
property. P2,400.00 FOR SUPPOSED TAX DELINQUENCY WAS SET-OFF BY THE
AMOUNT OF P4,116.00 WHICH THE GOVERNMENT IS INDEBTED TO THE
Francia was not present during the auction sale since he was in Iligan City FORMER.
at that time helping his uncle ship bananas.
II
On March 3, 1979, Francia received a notice of hearing of LRC Case No.
1593-P "In re: Petition for Entry of New Certificate of Title" filed by Ho RESPONDENT INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT COMMITTED A GRAVE
Fernandez, seeking the cancellation of TCT No. 4739 (37795) and the AND SERIOUS ERROR IN NOT HOLDING THAT PETITIONER WAS NOT
issuance in his name of a new certificate of title. Upon verification through PROPERLY AND DULY NOTIFIED THAT AN AUCTION SALE OF HIS
his lawyer, Francia discovered that a Final Bill of Sale had been issued in PROPERTY WAS TO TAKE PLACE ON DECEMBER 5, 1977 TO SATISFY AN
favor of Ho Fernandez by the City Treasurer on December 11, 1978. The ALLEGED TAX DELINQUENCY OF P2,400.00.
auction sale and the final bill of sale were both annotated at the back of
TCT No. 4739 (37795) by the Register of Deeds. III

On March 20, 1979, Francia filed a complaint to annul the auction sale. He RESPONDENT INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT FURTHER
later amended his complaint on January 24, 1980. COMMITTED A SERIOUS ERROR AND GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION IN
NOT HOLDING THAT THE PRICE OF P2,400.00 PAID BY RESPONTDENT
On April 23, 1981, the lower court rendered a decision, the dispositive HO FERNANDEZ WAS GROSSLY INADEQUATE AS TO SHOCK ONE'S
portion of which reads: CONSCIENCE AMOUNTING TO FRAUD AND A DEPRIVATION OF PROPERTY
WITHOUT DUE PROCESS OF LAW, AND CONSEQUENTLY, THE AUCTION
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, judgment is hereby rendered SALE MADE THEREOF IS VOID. (pp. 10, 17, 20-21, Rollo)
dismissing the amended complaint and ordering:
We gave due course to the petition for a more thorough inquiry into the
(a) The Register of Deeds of Pasay City to issue a new Transfer Certificate petitioner's allegations that his property was sold at public auction
of Title in favor of the defendant Ho Fernandez over the parcel of land without notice to him and that the price paid for the property was
TAXATION CASES |11

shockingly inadequate, amounting to fraud and deprivation without due state or municipality for taxes. Neither are they a proper subject of
process of law. recoupment since they do not arise out of the contract or transaction sued
on. ... (80 C.J.S., 7374). "The general rule based on grounds of public policy
A careful review of the case, however, discloses that Mr. Francia brought is well-settled that no set-off admissible against demands for taxes levied
the problems raised in his petition upon himself. While we commiserate for general or local governmental purposes. The reason on which the
with him at the loss of his property, the law and the facts militate against general rule is based, is that taxes are not in the nature of contracts
the grant of his petition. We are constrained to dismiss it. between the party and party but grow out of duty to, and are the positive
acts of the government to the making and enforcing of which, the personal
Francia contends that his tax delinquency of P2,400.00 has been consent of individual taxpayers is not required. ..."
extinguished by legal compensation. He claims that the government owed
him P4,116.00 when a portion of his land was expropriated on October 15, We stated that a taxpayer cannot refuse to pay his tax when called upon by
1977. Hence, his tax obligation had been set-off by operation of law as of the collector because he has a claim against the governmental body not
October 15, 1977. included in the tax levy.

There is no legal basis for the contention. By legal compensation, This rule was reiterated in the case of Corders v. Gonda (18 SCRA 331)
obligations of persons, who in their own right are reciprocally debtors and where we stated that: "... internal revenue taxes can not be the subject of
creditors of each other, are extinguished (Art. 1278, Civil Code). The compensation: Reason: government and taxpayer are not mutually
circumstances of the case do not satisfy the requirements provided by creditors and debtors of each other' under Article 1278 of the Civil Code
Article 1279, to wit: and a "claim for taxes is not such a debt, demand, contract or judgment as
is allowed to be set-off."
(1) that each one of the obligors be bound principally and that he be at the
same time a principal creditor of the other; There are other factors which compel us to rule against the petitioner. The
tax was due to the city government while the expropriation was effected by
xxx xxx xxx the national government. Moreover, the amount of P4,116.00 paid by the
national government for the 125 square meter portion of his lot was
(3) that the two debts be due. deposited with the Philippine National Bank long before the sale at public
auction of his remaining property. Notice of the deposit dated September
xxx xxx xxx 28, 1977 was received by the petitioner on September 30, 1977. The
petitioner admitted in his testimony that he knew about the P4,116.00
This principal contention of the petitioner has no merit. We have deposited with the bank but he did not withdraw it. It would have been an
consistently ruled that there can be no off-setting of taxes against the easy matter to withdraw P2,400.00 from the deposit so that he could pay
claims that the taxpayer may have against the government. A person the tax obligation thus aborting the sale at public auction.
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 Petitioner had one year within which to redeem his property although, as
tax cannot await the results of a lawsuit against the government. well be shown later, he claimed that he pocketed the notice of the auction
sale without reading it.
In the case of Republic v. Mambulao Lumber Co. (4 SCRA 622), this Court
ruled that Internal Revenue Taxes can not be the subject of set-off or Petitioner contends that "the auction sale in question was made without
compensation. We stated that: complying with the mandatory provisions of the statute governing tax sale.
No evidence, oral or otherwise, was presented that the procedure outlined
A claim for taxes is not such a debt, demand, contract or judgment as is by law on sales of property for tax delinquency was followed. ... Since
allowed to be set-off under the statutes of set-off, which are construed defendant Ho Fernandez has the affirmative of this issue, the burden of
uniformly, in the light of public policy, to exclude the remedy in an action or proof therefore rests upon him to show that plaintiff was duly and properly
any indebtedness of the state or municipality to one who is liable to the notified ... .(Petition for Review, Rollo p. 18; emphasis supplied)
TAXATION CASES |12

We agree with the petitioner's claim that Ho Fernandez, the purchaser at Q. So you admit that you received the original of Exhibit I and you signed
the auction sale, has the burden of proof to show that there was upon receipt thereof but you did not read the contents of it?
compliance with all the prescribed requisites for a tax sale.
A. Yes, sir, as I was in a hurry.
The case of Valencia v. Jimenez (11 Phil. 492) laid down the doctrine that:
Q. After you received that original where did you place it?
xxx xxx xxx
A. I placed it in the usual place where I place my mails.
... [D]ue process of law to be followed in tax proceedings must be
established by proof and the general rule is that the purchaser of a tax title Petitioner, therefore, was notified about the auction sale. It was negligence
is bound to take upon himself the burden of showing the regularity of all on his part when he ignored such notice. By his very own admission that he
proceedings leading up to the sale. (emphasis supplied) received the notice, his now coming to court assailing the validity of the
auction sale loses its force.
There is no presumption of the regularity of any administrative action
which results in depriving a taxpayer of his property through a tax sale. Petitioner's third assignment of grave error likewise lacks merit. As a
(Camo v. Riosa Boyco, 29 Phil. 437); Denoga v. Insular Government, 19 Phil. general rule, gross inadequacy of price is not material (De Leon v. Salvador,
261). This is actually an exception to the rule that administrative 36 SCRA 567; Ponce de Leon v. Rehabilitation Finance Corporation, 36
proceedings are presumed to be regular. SCRA 289; Tolentino v. Agcaoili, 91 Phil. 917 Unrep.). See also Barrozo Vda.
de Gordon v. Court of Appeals (109 SCRA 388) we held that "alleged gross
But even if the burden of proof lies with the purchaser to show that all inadequacy of price is not material when the law gives the owner the right
legal prerequisites have been complied with, the petitioner can not, to redeem as when a sale is made at public auction, upon the theory that
however, deny that he did receive the notice for the auction sale. The the lesser the price, the easier it is for the owner to effect redemption." In
records sustain the lower court's finding that: Velasquez v. Coronel (5 SCRA 985), this Court held:

[T]he plaintiff claimed that it was illegal and irregular. He insisted that he ... [R]espondent treasurer now claims that the prices for which the lands
was not properly notified of the auction sale. Surprisingly, however, he were sold are unconscionable considering the wide divergence between
admitted in his testimony that he received the letter dated November 21, their assessed values and the amounts for which they had been actually
1977 (Exhibit "I") as shown by his signature (Exhibit "I-A") thereof. He sold. However, while in ordinary sales for reasons of equity a transaction
claimed further that he was not present on December 5, 1977 the date of may be invalidated on the ground of inadequacy of price, or when such
the auction sale because he went to Iligan City. As long as there was inadequacy shocks one's conscience as to justify the courts to interfere,
substantial compliance with the requirements of the notice, the validity of such does not follow when the law gives to the owner the right to redeem,
the auction sale can not be assailed ... . as when a sale is made at public auction, upon the theory that the lesser
the price the easier it is for the owner to effect the redemption. And so it
We quote the following testimony of the petitioner on cross-examination, was aptly said: "When there is the right to redeem, inadequacy of price
to wit: should not be material, because the judgment debtor may reacquire the
property or also sell his right to redeem and thus recover the loss he claims
Q. My question to you is this letter marked as Exhibit I for Ho Fernandez to have suffered by reason of the price obtained at the auction sale."
notified you that the property in question shall be sold at public auction to
the highest bidder on December 5, 1977 pursuant to Sec. 74 of PD 464. Will The reason behind the above rulings is well enunciated in the case of
you tell the Court whether you received the original of this letter? Hilton et. ux. v. De Long, et al. (188 Wash. 162, 61 P. 2d, 1290):

A. I just signed it because I was not able to read the same. It was just sent If mere inadequacy of price is held to be a valid objection to a sale for taxes,
by mail carrier. the collection of taxes in this manner would be greatly embarrassed, if not
TAXATION CASES |13

rendered altogether impracticable. In Black on Tax Titles (2nd Ed.) 238, the SO ORDERED.
correct rule is stated as follows: "where land is sold for taxes, the
inadequacy of the price given is not a valid objection to the sale." This rule 2. Philex vs CIR
arises from necessity, for, if a fair price for the land were essential to the G.R. No. 125704 August 28, 1998
sale, it would be useless to offer the property. Indeed, it is notorious that
the prices habitually paid by purchasers at tax sales are grossly out of PHILEX MINING CORPORATION, petitioner,
proportion to the value of the land. (Rothchild Bros. v. Rollinger, 32 Wash. vs.
307, 73 P. 367, 369). COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, COURT OF APPEALS, and THE
COURT OF TAX APPEALS, respondents.
In this case now before us, we can aptly use the language of McGuire, et al.
v. Bean, et al. (267 P. 555):

Like most cases of this character there is here a certain element of ROMERO, J.:
hardship from which we would be glad to relieve, but do so would unsettle
long-established rules and lead to uncertainty and difficulty in the Petitioner Philex Mining Corp. assails the decision of the Court of Appeals
collection of taxes which are the life blood of the state. We are convinced promulgated on April 8, 1996 in CA-G.R. SP No. 36975 1 affirming the
that the present rules are just, and that they bring hardship only to those Court of Tax Appeals decision in CTA Case No. 4872 dated March 16, 1995
who have invited it by their own neglect. 2 ordering it 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
We are inclined to believe the petitioner's claim that the value of the lot has plus 20% annual interest from August 6, 1994 until fully paid pursuant to
greatly appreciated in value. Precisely because of the widening of Buendia Sections 248 and 249 of the Tax Code of 1977.
Avenue in Pasay City, which necessitated the expropriation of adjoining
areas, real estate values have gone up in the area. However, the price The facts show that on August 5, 1992, the BIR sent a letter to Philex asking
quoted by the petitioner for a 203 square meter lot appears quite it to settle its tax liabilities for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th quarter of 1991 as well
exaggerated. At any rate, the foregoing reasons which answer the as the 1st and 2nd quarter of 1992 in the total amount of P123,821.982.52
petitioner's claims lead us to deny the petition. computed as follows:

And finally, even if we are inclined to give relief to the petitioner on PERIOD COVERED BASIC TAX 25% SURCHARGE INTEREST TOTAL EXCISE
equitable grounds, there are no strong considerations of substantial justice
in his favor. Mr. Francia failed to pay his taxes for 14 years from 1963 up to TAX DUE
the date of the auction sale. He claims to have pocketed the notice of sale
without reading it which, if true, is still an act of inexplicable negligence. He 2nd Qtr., 1991 12,911,124.60 3,227,781.15 3,378,116.16 19,517,021.91
did not withdraw from the expropriation payment deposited with the
Philippine National Bank an amount sufficient to pay for the back taxes. 3rd Qtr., 1991 14,994,749.21 3,748,687.30 2,978,409.09 21,721,845.60
The petitioner did not pay attention to another notice sent by the City
Treasurer on November 3, 1978, during the period of redemption, 4th Qtr., 1991 19,406,480.13 4,851,620.03 2,631,837.72 26,889,937.88
regarding his tax delinquency. There is furthermore no showing of bad
faith or collusion in the purchase of the property by Mr. Fernandez. The ————— ————— —————— ——————
petitioner has no standing to invoke equity in his attempt to regain the
property by belatedly asking for the annulment of the sale. 47,312,353.94 11,828,088.48 8,988,362.97 68,128,805.39

WHEREFORE, IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the petition for review is ————— ————— —————— ——————
DISMISSED. The decision of the respondent court is affirmed.
1st Qtr., 1992 23,341,849.94 5,835,462.49 1,710,669.82 30,887,982.25
TAXATION CASES |14

debt of the Petitioner to the government cannot, therefore, be set-off


2nd Qtr., 1992 19,671,691.76 4,917,922.94 215,580.18 24,805,194.88 against the unliquidated claim which Petitioner conceived to exist in its
favor (see Companñ ia General de Tabacos vs. French and Unson, No. 14027,
————— ————— —————— —————— November 8, 1918, 39 Phil. 34). 8

43,013,541.70 10,753,385.43 1,926,250.00 55,693,177.13 Moreover, the Court of Tax Appeals ruled that "taxes cannot be subject to
set-off on compensation since claim for taxes is not a debt or contract." 9
————— ————— —————— —————— The dispositive portion of the CTA decision 10 provides:

90,325,895.64 22,581,473.91 10,914,612.97 123,821,982.52 3 In all the foregoing, this Petition for Review is hereby DENIED for lack of
merit and Petitioner is hereby ORDERED to PAY the Respondent the
========= ========= ========= ========= amount of P110,677,668.52 representing excise tax liability for the period
from the 2nd quarter of 1991 to the 2nd quarter of 1992 plus 20% annual
In a letter dated August 20, 1992, 4 Philex protested the demand for interest from August 6, 1994 until fully paid pursuant to Section 248 and
payment of the tax liabilities stating that it has pending claims for VAT 249 of the Tax Code, as amended.
input credit/refund for the taxes it paid for the years 1989 to 1991 in the
amount of P119,977,037.02 plus interest. Therefore these claims for tax Aggrieved with the decision, Philex appealed the case before the Court of
credit/refund should be applied against the tax liabilities, citing our ruling Appeals docketed as CA-GR. CV No. 36975. 11 Nonetheless, on April 8,
in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Itogon-Suyoc Mines, Inc. 5 1996, the Court of Appeals a Affirmed the Court of Tax Appeals
observation. The pertinent portion of which reads: 12
In reply, the BIR, in a letter dated September 7, 1992, 6 found no merit in
Philex's position. Since these pending claims have not yet been established WHEREFORE, the appeal by way of petition for review is hereby
or determined with certainty, it follows that no legal compensation can DISMISSED and the decision dated March 16, 1995 is AFFIRMED.
take place. Hence, the BIR reiterated its demand that Philex settle the
amount plus interest within 30 days from the receipt of the letter. Philex filed a motion for reconsideration which was, nevertheless, denied
in a Resolution dated July 11, 1996. 13
In view of the BIR's denial of the offsetting of Philex's claim for VAT input
credit/refund against its excise tax obligation, Philex raised the issue to the However, a few days after the denial of its motion for reconsideration,
Court of Tax Appeals on November 6, 1992. 7 In the course of the Philex was able to obtain its VAT input credit/refund not only for the
proceedings, the BIR issued Tax Credit Certificate SN 001795 in the taxable year 1989 to 1991 but also for 1992 and 1994, computed as
amount of P13,144,313.88 which, applied to the total tax liabilities of follows: 14
Philex of P123,821,982.52; effectively lowered the latter's tax obligation to
P110,677,688.52. Period Covered Tax Credit Date

Despite the reduction of its tax liabilities, the CTA still ordered Philex to By Claims For Certificate of
pay the remaining balance of P110,677,688.52 plus interest, elucidating its
reason, to wit: VAT refund/credit Number Issue Amount

Thus, for legal compensation to take place, both obligations must be 1994 (2nd Quarter) 007730 11 July 1996 P25,317,534.01
liquidated and demandable. "Liquidated" debts are those where the exact
amount has already been determined (PARAS, Civil Code of the Philippines, 1994 (4th Quarter) 007731 11 July 1996 P21,791,020.61
Annotated, Vol. IV, Ninth Edition, p. 259). In the instant case, the claims of
the Petitioner for VAT refund is still pending litigation, and still has to be 1989 007732 11 July 1996 P37,322,799.19
determined by this Court (C.T.A. Case No. 4707). A fortiori, the liquidated
TAXATION CASES |15

1990-1991 007751 16 July 1996 P84,662,787.46 It is important to note, that the premise of our ruling in the
aforementioned case was anchored on Section 51 (d) of the National
1992 (1st-3rd Quarter) 007755 23 July 1996 P36,501,147.95 Revenue Code of 1939. However, when the National Internal Revenue Code
of 1977 was enacted, the same provision upon which the Itogon-Suyoc
In view of the grant of its VAT input credit/refund, Philex now contends pronouncement was based was omitted. 22 Accordingly, the doctrine
that the same should, ipso jure, off-set its excise tax liabilities 15 since both enunciated in Itogon-Suyoc cannot be invoked by Philex.
had already become "due and demandable, as well as fully liquidated;" 16
hence, legal compensation can properly take place. Despite the foregoing rulings clearly adverse to Philex's position, it asserts
that the imposition of surcharge and interest for the non-payment of the
We see no merit in this contention. excise taxes within the time prescribed was unjustified. Philex posits the
theory that it had no obligation to pay the excise tax liabilities within the
In several instances prior to the instant case, we have already made the prescribed period since, after all, it still has pending claims for VAT input
pronouncement that taxes cannot be subject to compensation for the credit/refund with BIR. 23
simple reason that the government and the taxpayer are not creditors and
debtors of each other. 17 There is a material distinction between a tax and We fail to see the logic of Philex's claim for this is an outright disregard of
debt. Debts are due to the Government in its corporate capacity, while the basic principle in tax law that taxes are the lifeblood of the government
taxes are due to the Government in its sovereign capacity. 18 We find no and so should be collected without unnecessary hindrance. 24 Evidently, to
cogent reason to deviate from the aforementioned distinction. countenance Philex's whimsical reason would render ineffective our tax
collection system. Too simplistic, it finds no support in law or in
Prescinding from this premise, in Francia v. Intermediate Appellate Court, jurisprudence.
19 we categorically held that taxes cannot be subject to set-off or
compensation, thus: To be sure, we cannot allow Philex to refuse the payment of its tax
liabilities on the ground that it has a pending tax claim for refund or credit
We have consistently ruled that there can be no off-setting of taxes against against the government which has not yet been granted. It must be noted
the claims that the taxpayer may have against the government. A person that a distinguishing feature of a tax is that it is compulsory rather than a
cannot refuse to pay a tax on the ground that the government owes him an matter of bargain. 25 Hence, a tax does not depend upon the consent of the
amount equal to or greater than the tax being collected. The collection of a taxpayer. 26 If any taxpayer can defer the payment of taxes by raising the
tax cannot await the results of a lawsuit against the government. defense that it still has a pending claim for refund or credit, this would
adversely affect the government revenue system. A taxpayer cannot refuse
The ruling in Francia has been applied to the subsequent case of Caltex to pay his taxes when they fall due simply because he has a claim against
Philippines, Inc. v. Commission on Audit, 20 which reiterated that: the government or that the collection of the tax is contingent on the result
of the lawsuit it filed against the government. 27 Moreover, Philex's theory
. . . a taxpayer may not offset taxes due from the claims that he may have that would automatically apply its VAT input credit/refund against its tax
against the government. Taxes cannot be the subject of compensation liabilities can easily give rise to confusion and abuse, depriving the
because the government and taxpayer are not mutually creditors and government of authority over the manner by which taxpayers credit and
debtors of each other and a claim for taxes is not such a debt, demand, offset their tax liabilities.
contract or judgment as is allowed to be set-off.
Corollarily, the fact that Philex has pending claims for VAT input
Further, Philex's reliance on our holding in Commissioner of Internal claim/refund with the government is immaterial for the imposition of
Revenue v. Itogon-Suyoc Mines Inc., wherein we ruled that a pending charges and penalties prescribed under Section 248 and 249 of the Tax
refund may be set off against an existing tax liability even though the Code of 1977. The payment of the surcharge is mandatory and the BIR is
refund has not yet been approved by the Commissioner, 21 is no longer not vested with any authority to waive the collection thereof. 28 The same
without any support in statutory law. cannot be condoned for flimsy reasons, 29 similar to the one advanced by
Philex in justifying its non-payment of its tax liabilities.
TAXATION CASES |16

neglect of duty, then recourse under the Civil Code and the Tax Code can
Finally, Philex asserts that the BIR violated Section 106 (e) 30 of the also be availed of.
National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, which requires the refund of
input taxes within 60 days, 31 when it took five years for the latter to grant Art. 27 of the Civil Code provides:
its tax claim for VAT input credit/refund. 32
Art. 27. Any person suffering material or moral loss because a public
In this regard, we agree with Philex. While there is no dispute that a servant or employee refuses or neglects, without just cause, to perform his
claimant has the burden of proof to establish the factual basis of his or her official duty may file an action for damages and other relief against the
claim for tax credit or refund, 33 however, once the claimant has submitted latter, without prejudice to any disciplinary action that may be taken.
all the required documents it is the function of the BIR to assess these
documents with purposeful dispatch. After all, since taxpayers owe More importantly, Section 269 (c) of the National Internal Revenue Act of
honestly to government it is but just that government render fair service to 1997 states:
the taxpayers. 34
xxx xxx xxx
In the instant case, the VAT input taxes were paid between 1989 to 1991
but the refund of these erroneously paid taxes was only granted in 1996. (c) Wilfully neglecting to give receipts, as by law required for any sum
Obviously, had the BIR been more diligent and judicious with their duty, it collected in the performance of duty or wilfully neglecting to perform, any
could have granted the refund earlier. We need not remind the BIR that other duties enjoyed by law.
simple justice requires the speedy refund of wrongly-held taxes. 35 Fair
dealing and nothing less, is expected by the taxpayer from the BIR in the Simply put, both provisions abhor official inaction, willful neglect and
latter's discharge of its function. As aptly held in Roxas v. Court of Tax unreasonable delay in the performance of official duties. 39 In no uncertain
Appeals: 36 terms must we stress that every public employee or servant must strive to
render service to the people with utmost diligence and efficiency. Insolence
The power of taxation is sometimes called also the power to destroy. and delay have no place in government service. The BIR, being the
Therefore it should be exercised with caution to minimize injury to the government collecting arm, must and should do no less. It simply cannot be
proprietary rights of a taxpayer. It must be exercised fairly, equally and apathetic and laggard in rendering service to the taxpayer if it wishes to
uniformly, lest the tax collector kill the "hen that lays the golden egg" And, remain true to its mission of hastening the country's development. We take
in order to maintain the general public's trust and confidence in the judicial notice of the taxpayer's generally negative perception towards the
Government this power must be used justly and not treacherously. BIR; hence, it is up to the latter to prove its detractors wrong.

Despite our concern with the lethargic manner by which the BIR handled In sum, while we can never condone the BIR's apparent callousness in
Philex's tax claim, it is a settled rule that in the performance of performing its duties, still, the same cannot justify Philex's non-payment of
governmental function, the State is not bound by the neglect of its agents its tax liabilities. The adage "no one should take the law into his own
and officers. Nowhere is this more true than in the field of taxation. 37 hands" should have guided Philex's action.
Again, while we understand Philex's predicament, it must be stressed that
the same is not a valid reason for the non-payment of its tax liabilities. WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the instant petition is hereby
DISMISSED. The assailed decision of the Court of Appeals dated April 8,
To be sure, this is not to state that the taxpayer is devoid of remedy against 1996 is hereby AFFIRMED.
public servants or employees, especially BIR examiners who, in
investigating tax claims are seen to drag their feet needlessly. First, if the SO ORDERED.
BIR takes time in acting upon the taxpayer's claim for refund, the latter can
seek judicial remedy before the Court of Tax Appeals in the manner 3. ABS CBN vs. Court of Tax Appeals
prescribed by law. 38 Second, if the inaction can be characterized as willful G.R. No. L-52306 October 12, 1981
TAXATION CASES |17

ABS-CBN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, petitioner, in trade or business within the Philippines from all sources within this
vs. country as interest, dividends, rents, salaries, wages, premiums, annuities,
COURT OF TAX APPEALS and THE COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL compensations, remunerations, emoluments, or other fixed or
REVENUE, respondents. determinable annual or periodical gains, profits, and income, it has been
determined that the tax is still imposed on income derived from capital, or
labor, or both combined, in accordance with the basic principle of income
taxation (Sec. 39, Income Tax Regulations), and that a mere return of
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J.: capital or investment is not income (Par. 5,06, 1 Mertens Law of Federal
'Taxation). Since according to the findings of the Special Team who
This is a Petition for Review on certiorari of the Decision of the Court of inquired into business of the non-resident foreign film distributors, the
Tax Appeals in C.T.A. Case No. 2809, dated November 29, 1979, which distribution or exhibition right on a film is invariably acquired for a
affirmed the assessment by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, dated consideration, either for a lump sum or a percentage of the film rentals,
April 16, 1971, of a deficiency withholding income tax against petitioner, whether from a parent company or an independent outside producer, apart
ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation, for the years 1965, 1966, 1967 and of the receipts of a non-resident foreign film distributor derived from said
1968 in the respective amounts of P75,895.24, P99,239.18, P128,502.00 film represents, therefore, a return of investment.
and P222, 260.64, or a total of P525,897.06.
xxx xxx xxx
During the period pertinent to this case, petitioner corporation was
engaged in the business of telecasting local as well as foreign films 4. The local distributor should withhold 30% of one-half of the film rentals
acquired from foreign corporations not engaged in trade or business paid to the non-resident foreign film distributor and pay the same to this
within the Philippines. for which petitioner paid rentals after withholding office in accordance with law unless the non- resident foreign film
income tax of 30%of one-half of the film rentals. distributor makes a prior settlement of its income tax liability. (Emphasis
ours).
In so far as the income tax on non-resident corporations is concerned,
section 24 (b) of the National Internal Revenue Code, as amended by Pursuant to the foregoing, petitioner dutifully withheld and turned over to
Republic Act No. 2343 dated June 20, 1959, used to provide: the Bureau of Internal Revenue the amount of 30% of one-half of the film
rentals paid by it to foreign corporations not engaged in trade or business
(b) Tax on foreign corporations.—(1) Non-resident corporations.— There within the Philippines. The last year that petitioner withheld taxes
shall be levied, collected, and paid for each taxable year, in lieu of the tax pursuant to the foregoing Circular was in 1968.
imposed by the preceding paragraph, upon the amount received by every
foreign corporation not engaged in trade or business within the On June 27, 1968, Republic Act No. 5431 amended Section 24 (b) of the Tax
Philippines, from an sources within the Philippines, as interest, dividends, Code increasing the tax rate from 30 % to 35 % and revising the tax basis
rents, salaries, wages, premiums, annuities, compensations, from "such amount" referring to rents, etc. to "gross income," as follows:
remunerations, emoluments, or other fixed or determinable annual or
periodical gains, profits, and income, a tax equal to thirty per centum of (b) Tax on foreign corporations.—(1) Non-resident corporations.—A
such amount. (Emphasis supplied) foreign corporation not engaged in trade or business in the Philippines
including a foreign life insurance company not engaged in the life
On April 12, 1961, in implementation of the aforequoted provision, the insurance business in the Philippines shall pay a tax equal to thirty-five per
Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued General Circular No. V-334 cent of the gross income received during each taxable year from all sources
reading thus: within the Philippines, as interests, dividends, rents, royalties, salaries,
wages, premiums, annuities, compensations, remunerations for technical
In connection with Section 24 (b) of Tax Code, the amendment introduced services or otherwise, emoluments or other fixed or determinable annual,
by Republic Act No. 2343, under which an income tax equal to 30% is periodical or casual gains, profits, and income, and capital gains, Provided
levied upon the amount received by every foreign corporation not engaged
TAXATION CASES |18

however, That premiums shah not include reinsurance premiums.


(Emphasis supplied) Withholding tax due thereon

On February 8, 1971, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued 153,318.00


Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 4-71, revoking General Circular No. V-
334, and holding that the latter was "erroneous for lack of legal basis," Less: Amount already assessed
because "the tax therein prescribed should be based on gross income
without deduction whatever," thus: 89,000.00

After a restudy and analysis of Section 24 (b) of the National Internal Balance
Revenue Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 5431, and guided by the
interpretation given by tax authorities to a similar provision in the Internal
P64,318.00
Revenue Code of the United States, on which the aforementioned provision
of our Tax Code was patterned, this Office has come to the conclusion that
Add: 1/2% mo. int. fr. 4-16-66 to 4-16-69
the tax therein prescribed should be based on gross income without t
deduction whatever. Consequently, the ruling in General Circular No. V-334,
dated April 12, 1961, allowing the deduction of the proportionate cost of
production or exhibition of motion picture films from the rental income of 11,577.24
non- resident foreign corporations, is erroneous for lack of legal basis.
Total amount due & collectible
In view thereof, General Circular No. V-334, dated April 12, 1961, is hereby
revoked and henceforth, local films distributors and exhibitors shall deduct P 75,895.24
and withhold 35% of the entire amount payable by them to non-resident
foreign corporations, as film rental or royalty, or whatever such payment 1966
may be denominated, without any deduction whatever, pursuant to Section
24 (b), and pay the withheld taxes in accordance with Section 54 of the Tax Total amount remitted
Code, as amended. P373,492.24
Withholding tax due thereon
All rulings inconsistent with this Circular is likewise revoked. (Emphasis 112,048.00
ours) Less: Amount already assessed
27,947.00
On the basis of this new Circular, respondent Commissioner of Internal Balance
Revenue issued against petitioner a letter of assessment and demand dated 84,101.00
April 15, 1971, but allegedly released by it and received by petitioner on
April 12, 1971, requiring them to pay deficiency withholding income tax on Add: 11/2%mo. int. fr. 4-16-67 to 4-116-70
the remitted film rentals for the years 1965 through 1968 and film royalty
as of the end of 1968 in the total amount of P525,897.06 computed as
follows: 15,138.18
1965 Total amount due & collectible
Total amount remitted

P 511,059.48 P99,239.18
TAXATION CASES |19

1967 291,283.00

Total amount remitted Less: Amount already assessed

P601,160.65 92,886.00

Withholding tax due thereon Balance

180,348.00 P198,447.00

Less: Amount already assessed Add: 1/2% mo. int. fr. 4-16-69 to 4-29-71

71,448.00 23,813.64

Balance Total amount due & collectible

108,900.00 P222,260.44 1

Add: 1/2% mo. int. fr. 4-16-68 to 4-16-71 On May 5, 1971, petitioner requested for a reconsideration and withdrawal
of the assessment. However, without acting thereon, respondent, on April
6, 1976, issued a warrant of distraint and levy over petitioner's personal as
19,602.00 well as real properties. The petitioner then filed its Petition for Review
with the Court of Tax Appeals whose Decision, dated November 29, 1979,
Total amount due & collectible is, in turn, the subject of this review. The Tax Court held:

For the reasons given, the Court finds the assessment issued by respondent
on April 16, 1971 against petitioner in the amounts of P75,895.24, P
P128,502.00
99,239.18, P128,502.00 and P222,260.64 or a total of P525,897.06 as
deficiency withholding income tax for the years 1965, 1966, 1967 and
1968
1968, respectively, in accordance with law. As prayed for, the petition for
review filed in this case is dismissed, and petitioner ABS-CBN Broadcasting
Total amount remitted
Corporation is hereby ordered to pay the sum of P525,897.06 to
respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue as deficiency withholding
income tax for the taxable years 1965 thru 1968, plus the surcharge and
P881,816.92 interest which have accrued thereon incident to delinquency pursuant to
Section 51 (e) of the National Internal Revenue Code, as amended.
Withholding tax due thereon
TAXATION CASES |20

WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby affirmed at petitioner's new Circular was issued. And in so far as the enumerated exceptions are
cost. concerned, admittedly, petitioner does not fall under any of them.

SO ORDERED. 2 Respondent claims, however, that the provision on non-retroactivity is


inapplicable in the present case in that General Circular No. V-334 is a
The issues raised are two-fold: nullity because in effect, it changed the law on the matter. The Court of Tax
Appeals sustained this position holding that: "Deductions are wholly and
I. Whether or not respondent can apply General Circular No. 4-71 exclusively within the power of Congress or the law-making body to grant,
retroactively and issue a deficiency assessment against petitioner in the condition or deny; and where the statute imposes a tax equal to a specified
amount of P 525,897.06 as deficiency withholding income tax for the years rate or percentage of the gross or entire amount received by the taxpayer,
1965, 1966, 1967 and 1968. the authority of some administrative officials to modify or change, much
less reduce, the basis or measure of the tax should not be read into law." 4
II. Whether or not the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to Therefore, the Tax Court concluded, petitioner did not acquire any vested
assess the deficiency withholding income tax for the year 196,5 has right thereunder as the same was a nullity.
prescribed. 3
The rationale behind General Circular No. V-334 was clearly stated therein,
Upon the facts and circumstances of the case, review is warranted. however: "It ha(d) been determined that the tax is still imposed on income
derived from capital, or labor, or both combined, in accordance with the
In point is Sec. 338-A (now Sec. 327) of the Tax Code. As inserted by basic principle of income taxation ...and that a mere return of capital or
Republic Act No. 6110 on August 9, 1969, it provides: investment is not income ... ." "A part of the receipts of a non-resident
foreign film distributor derived from said film represents, therefore, a
Sec. 338-A. Non-retroactivity of rulings. — Any revocation, modification, or return of investment." The Circular thus fixed the return of capital at 50%
reversal of and of the rules and regulations promulgated in accordance to simplify the administrative chore of determining the portion of the
with the preceding section or any of the rulings or circulars promulgated rentals covering the return of capital." 5
by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall not be given retroactive
application if the relocation, modification, or reversal will be prejudicial to Were the "gross income" base clear from Sec. 24 (b), perhaps, the
the taxpayers, except in the following cases: (a) where the taxpayer ratiocination of the Tax Court could be upheld. It should be noted, however,
deliberately mis-states or omits material facts from his return or any that said Section was not too plain and simple to understand. The fact that
document required of him by the Bureau of Internal Revenue: (b) where the issuance of the General Circular in question was rendered necessary
the facts subsequently gathered by the Bureau of Internal Revenue are leads to no other conclusion than that it was not easy of comprehension
materially different from the facts on which the ruling is based; or (c) and could be subjected to different interpretations.
where the taxpayer acted in bad faith. (italics for emphasis)
In fact, Republic Act No. 2343, dated June 20, 1959, supra, which was the
It is clear from the foregoing that rulings or circulars promulgated by the basis of General Circular No. V-334, was just one in a series of enactments
Commissioner of Internal Revenue have no retroactive application where regarding Sec. 24 (b) of the Tax Code. Republic Act No. 3825 came next on
to so apply them would be prejudicial to taxpayers. The prejudice to June 22, 1963 without changing the basis but merely adding a proviso (in
petitioner of the retroactive application of Memorandum Circular No. 4-71 bold letters).
is beyond question. It was issued only in 1971, or three years after 1968,
the last year that petitioner had withheld taxes under General Circular No. (b) Tax on foreign corporation.—(1) Non-resident corporations. — There
V-334. The assessment and demand on petitioner to pay deficiency shall be levied, collected and paid for each taxable year, in lieu of the tax
withholding income tax was also made three years after 1968 for a period imposed by the preceding paragraph, upon the amount received by every
of time commencing in 1965. Petitioner was no longer in a position to foreign corporation not engaged in trade or business within the
withhold taxes due from foreign corporations because it had already Philippines, from all sources within the Philippines, as interest, dividends,
remitted all film rentals and no longer had any control over them when the rents, salaries, wages, premiums annuities, compensations, remunerations,
TAXATION CASES |21

emoluments, or other fixed or determinable annual or periodical gains,


profits, and income, a tax equal to thirty per centum of such amount: We have also noted that in its Decision, the Court of Tax Appeals further
PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT PREMIUMS SHALL NOT INCLUDE required the petitioner to pay interest and surcharge as provided for in
REINSURANCE PREMIUMS. (double emphasis ours). Sec. 51 (e) of the Tax Code in addition to the deficiency withholding tax of
P 525,897.06. This additional requirement is much less called for because
Republic Act No. 3841, dated likewise on June 22, 1963, followed after, the petitioner relied in good faith and religiously complied with no less
omitting the proviso and inserting some words (also in bold letters). than a Circular issued "to all internal revenue officials" by the highest
official of the Bureau of Internal Revenue and approved by the then
(b) Tax on foreign corporations.—(1) Non-resident corporations.—There Secretary of Finance. 13
shall be levied, collected and paid for each taxable year, in lieu of the tax
imposed by the preceding paragraph, upon the amount received by every With the foregoing conclusions arrived at, resolution of the issue of
foreign corporation not engaged in trade or business within the prescription becomes unnecessary.
Philippines, from all sources within the Philippines, as interest, dividends,
rents, salaries, wages, premiums, annuities, compensations, WHEREFORE, the judgment of the Court of Tax Appeals is hereby reversed,
remunerations, emoluments, or other fixed or determinable annual or and the questioned assessment set aside. No costs.
periodical OR CASUAL gains, profits and income, AND CAPITAL GAINS, a
tax equal to thirty per centum of such amount. 6 (double emphasis SO ORDERED.
supplied)
4. CIR vs. Proctor and Gamble
The principle of legislative approval of administrative interpretation by re- G.R. No. L-66838 December 2, 1991
enactment clearly obtains in this case. It provides that "the re-enactment of
a statute substantially unchanged is persuasive indication of the adoption COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner,
by Congress of a prior executive construction. 7 Note should be taken of vs.
the fact that this case involves not a mere opinion of the Commissioner or PROCTER & GAMBLE PHILIPPINE MANUFACTURING CORPORATION and
ruling rendered on a mere query, but a Circular formally issued to "all THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS, respondents.
internal revenue officials" by the then Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
T.A. Tejada & C.N. Lim for private respondent.
It was only on June 27, 1968 under Republic Act No. 5431, supra, which
became the basis of Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 4-71, that Sec. 24
(b) was amended to refer specifically to 35% of the "gross income."
RESOLUTION
This Court is not unaware of the well-entrenched principle that the
Government is never estopped from collecting taxes because of mistakes or
errors on the part of its
agents. 8 In fact, utmost caution should be taken in this regard. 9 But, like
FELICIANO, J.:p
other principles of law, this also admits of exceptions in the interest of
justice and fairplay. The insertion of Sec. 338-A into the National Internal
For the taxable year 1974 ending on 30 June 1974, and the taxable year
Revenue Code, as held in the case of Tuason, Jr. vs. Lingad, 10 is indicative
1975 ending 30 June 1975, private respondent Procter and Gamble
of legislative intention to support the principle of good faith. In fact, in the
Philippine Manufacturing Corporation ("P&G-Phil.") declared dividends
United States, from where Sec. 24 (b) was patterned, it has been held that
payable to its parent company and sole stockholder, Procter and Gamble
the Commissioner of Collector is precluded from adopting a position
Co., Inc. (USA) ("P&G-USA"), amounting to P24,164,946.30, from which
inconsistent with one previously taken where injustice would result
dividends the amount of P8,457,731.21 representing the thirty-five
therefrom, 11 or where there has been a misrepresentation to the taxpayer.
percent (35%) withholding tax at source was deducted.
12
TAXATION CASES |22

Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The question was not raised by the


On 5 January 1977, private respondent P&G-Phil. filed with petitioner Commissioner on the administrative level, and neither was it raised by him
Commissioner of Internal Revenue a claim for refund or tax credit in the before the CTA.
amount of P4,832,989.26 claiming, among other things, that pursuant to
Section 24 (b) (1) of the National Internal Revenue Code ("NITC"), 1 as We believe that the Bureau of Internal Revenue ("BIR") should not be
amended by Presidential Decree No. 369, the applicable rate of allowed to defeat an otherwise valid claim for refund by raising this
withholding tax on the dividends remitted was only fifteen percent (15%) question of alleged incapacity for the first time on appeal before this Court.
(and not thirty-five percent [35%]) of the dividends. This is clearly a matter of procedure. Petitioner does not pretend that P&G-
Phil., should it succeed in the claim for refund, is likely to run away, as it
There being no responsive action on the part of the Commissioner, P&G- were, with the refund instead of transmitting such refund or tax credit to
Phil., on 13 July 1977, filed a petition for review with public respondent its parent and sole stockholder. It is commonplace that in the absence of
Court of Tax Appeals ("CTA") docketed as CTA Case No. 2883. On 31 explicit statutory provisions to the contrary, the government must follow
January 1984, the CTA rendered a decision ordering petitioner the same rules of procedure which bind private parties. It is, for instance,
Commissioner to refund or grant the tax credit in the amount of clear that the government is held to compliance with the provisions of
P4,832,989.00. Circular No. 1-88 of this Court in exactly the same way that private litigants
are held to such compliance, save only in respect of the matter of filing fees
On appeal by the Commissioner, the Court through its Second Division from which the Republic of the Philippines is exempt by the Rules of Court.
reversed the decision of the CTA and held that:
More importantly, there arises here a question of fairness should the BIR,
(a) P&G-USA, and not private respondent P&G-Phil., was the proper party unlike any other litigant, be allowed to raise for the first time on appeal
to claim the refund or tax credit here involved; questions which had not been litigated either in the lower court or on the
administrative level. For, if petitioner had at the earliest possible
(b) there is nothing in Section 902 or other provisions of the US Tax Code opportunity, i.e., at the administrative level, demanded that P&G-Phil.
that allows a credit against the US tax due from P&G-USA of taxes deemed produce an express authorization from its parent corporation to bring the
to have been paid in the Philippines equivalent to twenty percent (20%) claim for refund, then P&G-Phil. would have been able forthwith to secure
which represents the difference between the regular tax of thirty-five and produce such authorization before filing the action in the instant case.
percent (35%) on corporations and the tax of fifteen percent (15%) on The action here was commenced just before expiration of the two (2)-year
dividends; and prescriptive period.

(c) private respondent P&G-Phil. failed to meet certain conditions 2. The question of the capacity of P&G-Phil. to bring the claim for refund
necessary in order that "the dividends received by its non-resident parent has substantive dimensions as well which, as will be seen below, also
company in the US (P&G-USA) may be subject to the preferential tax rate of ultimately relate to fairness.
15% instead of 35%."
Under Section 306 of the NIRC, a claim for refund or tax credit filed with
These holdings were questioned in P&G-Phil.'s Motion for Re-consideration the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is essential for maintenance of a
and we will deal with them seriatim in this Resolution resolving that suit for recovery of taxes allegedly erroneously or illegally assessed or
Motion. collected:

I Sec. 306. Recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. — No suit or


proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any
1. There are certain preliminary aspects of the question of the capacity of national internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or
P&G-Phil. to bring the present claim for refund or tax credit, which need to illegally assessed or collected, or of any penalty claimed to have been
be examined. This question was raised for the first time on appeal, i.e., in collected without authority, or of any sum alleged to have been excessive or
the proceedings before this Court on the Petition for Review filed by the in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or credit has
TAXATION CASES |23

been duly filed with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; but such suit
or proceeding may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum In Philippine Guaranty Company, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
has been paid under protest or duress. In any case, no such suit or 5 this Court pointed out that a withholding agent is in fact the agent both of
proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two years from the date the government and of the taxpayer, and that the withholding agent is not
of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that an ordinary government agent:
may arise after payment: . . . (Emphasis supplied)
The law sets no condition for the personal liability of the withholding agent
Section 309 (3) of the NIRC, in turn, provides: to attach. The reason is to compel the withholding agent to withhold the
tax under all circumstances. In effect, the responsibility for the collection of
Sec. 309. Authority of Commissioner to Take Compromises and to Refund the tax as well as the payment thereof is concentrated upon the person
Taxes.—The Commissioner may: over whom the Government has jurisdiction. Thus, the withholding agent
is constituted the agent of both the Government and the taxpayer. With
xxx xxx xxx respect to the collection and/or withholding of the tax, he is the
Government's agent. In regard to the filing of the necessary income tax
(3) credit or refund taxes erroneously or illegally received, . . . No credit or return and the payment of the tax to the Government, he is the agent of the
refund of taxes or penalties shall be allowed unless the taxpayer files in taxpayer. The withholding agent, therefore, is no ordinary government
writing with the Commissioner a claim for credit or refund within two (2) agent especially because under Section 53 (c) he is held personally liable
years after the payment of the tax or penalty. (As amended by P.D. No. 69) for the tax he is duty bound to withhold; whereas the Commissioner and
(Emphasis supplied) his deputies are not made liable by law. 6 (Emphasis supplied)

Since the claim for refund was filed by P&G-Phil., the question which arises If, as pointed out in Philippine Guaranty, the withholding agent is also an
is: is P&G-Phil. a "taxpayer" under Section 309 (3) of the NIRC? The term agent of the beneficial owner of the dividends with respect to the filing of
"taxpayer" is defined in our NIRC as referring to "any person subject to tax the necessary income tax return and with respect to actual payment of the
imposed by the Title [on Tax on Income]." 2 It thus becomes important to tax to the government, such authority may reasonably be held to include
note that under Section 53 (c) of the NIRC, the withholding agent who is the authority to file a claim for refund and to bring an action for recovery of
"required to deduct and withhold any tax" is made " personally liable for such claim. This implied authority is especially warranted where, is in the
such tax" and indeed is indemnified against any claims and demands which instant case, the withholding agent is the wholly owned subsidiary of the
the stockholder might wish to make in questioning the amount of parent-stockholder and therefore, at all times, under the effective control
payments effected by the withholding agent in accordance with the of such parent-stockholder. In the circumstances of this case, it seems
provisions of the NIRC. The withholding agent, P&G-Phil., is directly and particularly unreal to deny the implied authority of P&G-Phil. to claim a
independently liable 3 for the correct amount of the tax that should be refund and to commence an action for such refund.
withheld from the dividend remittances. The withholding agent is,
moreover, subject to and liable for deficiency assessments, surcharges and We believe that, even now, there is nothing to preclude the BIR from
penalties should the amount of the tax withheld be finally found to be less requiring P&G-Phil. to show some written or telexed confirmation by P&G-
than the amount that should have been withheld under law. USA of the subsidiary's authority to claim the refund or tax credit and to
remit the proceeds of the refund., or to apply the tax credit to some
A "person liable for tax" has been held to be a "person subject to tax" and Philippine tax obligation of, P&G-USA, before actual payment of the refund
properly considered a "taxpayer." 4 The terms liable for tax" and "subject to or issuance of a tax credit certificate. What appears to be vitiated by basic
tax" both connote legal obligation or duty to pay a tax. It is very difficult, unfairness is petitioner's position that, although P&G-Phil. is directly and
indeed conceptually impossible, to consider a person who is statutorily personally liable to the Government for the ataxes and any deficiency
made "liable for tax" as not "subject to tax." By any reasonable standard, assessments to be collected, the Government is not legally liable for a
such a person should be regarded as a party in interest, or as a person refund simply because it did not demand a written confirmation of P&G-
having sufficient legal interest, to bring a suit for refund of taxes he Phil.'s implied authority from the very beginning. A sovereign government
believes were illegally collected from him. should act honorably and fairly at all times, even vis-a-vis taxpayers.
TAXATION CASES |24

It is important to note that Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, does not require that
We believe and so hold that, under the circumstances of this case, P&G- the US must give a "deemed paid" tax credit for the dividend tax (20
Phil. is properly regarded as a "taxpayer" within the meaning of Section percentage points) waived by the Philippines in making applicable the
309, NIRC, and as impliedly authorized to file the claim for refund and the preferred divided tax rate of fifteen percent (15%). In other words, our
suit to recover such claim. NIRC does not require that the US tax law deem the parent-corporation to
have paid the twenty (20) percentage points of dividend tax waived by the
II Philippines. The NIRC only requires that the US "shall allow" P&G-USA a
"deemed paid" tax credit in an amount equivalent to the twenty (20)
1. We turn to the principal substantive question before us: the applicability percentage points waived by the Philippines.
to the dividend remittances by P&G-Phil. to P&G-USA of the fifteen percent
(15%) tax rate provided for in the following portion of Section 24 (b) (1) of 2. The question arises: Did the US law comply with the above requirement?
the NIRC: The relevant provisions of the US Intemal Revenue Code ("Tax Code") are
the following:
(b) Tax on foreign corporations.—
Sec. 901 — Taxes of foreign countries and possessions of United States.
(1) Non-resident corporation. — A foreign corporation not engaged in
trade and business in the Philippines, . . ., shall pay a tax equal to 35% of (a) Allowance of credit. — If the taxpayer chooses to have the benefits of
the gross income receipt during its taxable year from all sources within the this subpart, the tax imposed by this chapter shall, subject to the applicable
Philippines, as . . . dividends . . . Provided, still further, that on dividends limitation of section 904, be credited with the amounts provided in the
received from a domestic corporation liable to tax under this Chapter, the applicable paragraph of subsection (b) plus, in the case of a corporation,
tax shall be 15% of the dividends, which shall be collected and paid as the taxes deemed to have been paid under sections 902 and 960. Such
provided in Section 53 (d) of this Code, subject to the condition that the choice for any taxable year may be made or changed at any time before the
country in which the non-resident foreign corporation, is domiciled shall expiration of the period prescribed for making a claim for credit or refund
allow a credit against the tax due from the non-resident foreign of the tax imposed by this chapter for such taxable year. The credit shall
corporation, taxes deemed to have been paid in the Philippines equivalent not be allowed against the tax imposed by section 531 (relating to the tax
to 20% which represents the difference between the regular tax (35%) on on accumulated earnings), against the additional tax imposed for the
corporations and the tax (15%) on dividends as provided in this Section . . . taxable year under section 1333 (relating to war loss recoveries) or under
section 1351 (relating to recoveries of foreign expropriation losses), or
The ordinary thirty-five percent (35%) tax rate applicable to dividend against the personal holding company tax imposed by section 541.
remittances to non-resident corporate stockholders of a Philippine
corporation, goes down to fifteen percent (15%) if the country of domicile (b) Amount allowed. — Subject to the applicable limitation of section 904,
of the foreign stockholder corporation "shall allow" such foreign the following amounts shall be allowed as the credit under subsection (a):
corporation a tax credit for "taxes deemed paid in the Philippines,"
applicable against the tax payable to the domiciliary country by the foreign (a) Citizens and domestic corporations. — In the case of a citizen of the
stockholder corporation. In other words, in the instant case, the reduced United States and of a domestic corporation, the amount of any income,
fifteen percent (15%) dividend tax rate is applicable if the USA "shall war profits, and excess profits taxes paid or accrued during the taxable
allow" to P&G-USA a tax credit for "taxes deemed paid in the Philippines" year to any foreign country or to any possession of the United States; and
applicable against the US taxes of P&G-USA. The NIRC specifies that such
tax credit for "taxes deemed paid in the Philippines" must, as a minimum, xxx xxx xxx
reach an amount equivalent to twenty (20) percentage points which
represents the difference between the regular thirty-five percent (35%) Sec. 902. — Credit for corporate stockholders in foreign corporation.
dividend tax rate and the preferred fifteen percent (15%) dividend tax rate.
(A) Treatment of Taxes Paid by Foreign Corporation. — For purposes of
this subject, a domestic corporation which owns at least 10 percent of the
TAXATION CASES |25

voting stock of a foreign corporation from which it receives dividends in


any taxable year shall — b. US law (Section 902, US Tax Code) grants to P&G-USA a "deemed paid'
tax credit 8 for a proportionate part of the corporate income tax actually
xxx xxx xxx paid to the Philippines by P&G-Phil.

(2) to the extent such dividends are paid by such foreign corporation out of The parent-corporation P&G-USA is "deemed to have paid" a portion of the
accumulated profits [as defined in subsection (c) (1) (b)] of a year for Philippine corporate income tax although that tax was actually paid by its
which such foreign corporation is a less developed country corporation, be Philippine subsidiary, P&G-Phil., not by P&G-USA. This "deemed paid"
deemed to have paid the same proportion of any income, war profits, or concept merely reflects economic reality, since the Philippine corporate
excess profits taxes paid or deemed to be paid by such foreign corporation income tax was in fact paid and deducted from revenues earned in the
to any foreign country or to any possession of the United States on or with Philippines, thus reducing the amount remittable as dividends to P&G-USA.
respect to such accumulated profits, which the amount of such dividends In other words, US tax law treats the Philippine corporate income tax as if
bears to the amount of such accumulated profits. it came out of the pocket, as it were, of P&G-USA as a part of the economic
cost of carrying on business operations in the Philippines through the
xxx xxx xxx medium of P&G-Phil. and here earning profits. What is, under US law,
deemed paid by P&G- USA are not "phantom taxes" but instead Philippine
(c) Applicable Rules corporate income taxes actually paid here by P&G-Phil., which are very real
indeed.
(1) Accumulated profits defined. — For purposes of this section, the term
"accumulated profits" means with respect to any foreign corporation, It is also useful to note that both (i) the tax credit for the Philippine
dividend tax actually withheld, and (ii) the tax credit for the Philippine
(A) for purposes of subsections (a) (1) and (b) (1), the amount of its gains, corporate income tax actually paid by P&G Phil. but "deemed paid" by P&G-
profits, or income computed without reduction by the amount of the USA, are tax credits available or applicable against the US corporate income
income, war profits, and excess profits taxes imposed on or with respect to tax of P&G-USA. These tax credits are allowed because of the US
such profits or income by any foreign country. . . .; and congressional desire to avoid or reduce double taxation of the same
income stream. 9
(B) for purposes of subsections (a) (2) and (b) (2), the amount of its gains,
profits, or income in excess of the income, war profits, and excess profits In order to determine whether US tax law complies with the requirements
taxes imposed on or with respect to such profits or income. for applicability of the reduced or preferential fifteen percent (15%)
dividend tax rate under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, it is necessary:
The Secretary or his delegate shall have full power to determine from the
accumulated profits of what year or years such dividends were paid, a. to determine the amount of the 20 percentage points dividend tax
treating dividends paid in the first 20 days of any year as having been paid waived by the Philippine government under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, and
from the accumulated profits of the preceding year or years (unless to his which hence goes to P&G-USA;
satisfaction shows otherwise), and in other respects treating dividends as
having been paid from the most recently accumulated gains, profits, or b. to determine the amount of the "deemed paid" tax credit which US tax
earning. . . . (Emphasis supplied) law must allow to P&G-USA; and

Close examination of the above quoted provisions of the US Tax Code 7 c. to ascertain that the amount of the "deemed paid" tax credit allowed by
shows the following: US law is at least equal to the amount of the dividend tax waived by the
Philippine Government.
a. US law (Section 901, Tax Code) grants P&G-USA a tax credit for the
amount of the dividend tax actually paid (i.e., withheld) from the dividend Amount (a), i.e., the amount of the dividend tax waived by the Philippine
remittances to P&G-USA; government is arithmetically determined in the following manner:
TAXATION CASES |26

to the BIR
P100.00 — Pretax net corporate income earned by P&G-Phil.
x 35% — Regular Philippine corporate income tax rate Dividends actually
——— remitted by P&G-Phil.
P35.00 — Paid to the BIR by P&G-Phil. as Philippine to P&G-USA P55.25
corporate income tax. ——————— = ——— x P35.00 = P29.75 10
Amount of accumulated P65.00 ======
P100.00 profits earned by
-35.00 P&G-Phil. in excess
——— of income tax
P65.00 — Available for remittance as dividends to P&G-USA
Thus, for every P55.25 of dividends actually remitted (after withholding at
P65.00 — Dividends remittable to P&G-USA the rate of 15%) by P&G-Phil. to its US parent P&G-USA, a tax credit of
x 35% — Regular Philippine dividend tax rate under Section 24 P29.75 is allowed by Section 902 US Tax Code for Philippine corporate
——— (b) (1), NIRC income tax "deemed paid" by the parent but actually paid by the wholly-
P22.75 — Regular dividend tax owned subsidiary.

P65.00 — Dividends remittable to P&G-USA Since P29.75 is much higher than P13.00 (the amount of dividend tax
x 15% — Reduced dividend tax rate under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC waived by the Philippine government), Section 902, US Tax Code,
——— specifically and clearly complies with the requirements of Section 24 (b)
P9.75 — Reduced dividend tax (1), NIRC.

P22.75 — Regular dividend tax under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC 3. It is important to note also that the foregoing reading of Sections 901
-9.75 — Reduced dividend tax under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC and 902 of the US Tax Code is identical with the reading of the BIR of
——— Sections 901 and 902 of the US Tax Code is identical with the reading of the
P13.00 — Amount of dividend tax waived by Philippine BIR of Sections 901 and 902 as shown by administrative rulings issued by
===== government under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC. the BIR.

Thus, amount (a) above is P13.00 for every P100.00 of pre-tax net income The first Ruling was issued in 1976, i.e., BIR Ruling No. 76004, rendered by
earned by P&G-Phil. Amount (a) is also the minimum amount of the then Acting Commissioner of Intemal Revenue Efren I. Plana, later
"deemed paid" tax credit that US tax law shall allow if P&G-USA is to Associate Justice of this Court, the relevant portion of which stated:
qualify for the reduced or preferential dividend tax rate under Section 24
(b) (1), NIRC. However, after a restudy of the decision in the American Chicle Company
case and the provisions of Section 901 and 902 of the U.S. Internal Revenue
Amount (b) above, i.e., the amount of the "deemed paid" tax credit which Code, we find merit in your contention that our computation of the credit
US tax law allows under Section 902, Tax Code, may be computed which the U.S. tax law allows in such cases is erroneous as the amount of
arithmetically as follows: tax "deemed paid" to the Philippine government for purposes of credit
against the U.S. tax by the recipient of dividends includes a portion of the
P65.00 — Dividends remittable to P&G-USA amount of income tax paid by the corporation declaring the dividend in
- 9.75 — Dividend tax withheld at the reduced (15%) rate addition to the tax withheld from the dividend remitted. In other words,
——— the U.S. government will allow a credit to the U.S. corporation or recipient
P55.25 — Dividends actually remitted to P&G-USA of the dividend, in addition to the amount of tax actually withheld, a
portion of the income tax paid by the corporation declaring the dividend.
P35.00 — Philippine corporate income tax paid by P&G-Phil. Thus, if a Philippine corporation wholly owned by a U.S. corporation has a
TAXATION CASES |27

net income of P100,000, it will pay P25,000 Philippine income tax thereon 4. We should not overlook the fact that the concept of "deemed paid" tax
in accordance with Section 24(a) of the Tax Code. The net income, after credit, which is embodied in Section 902, US Tax Code, is exactly the same
income tax, which is P75,000, will then be declared as dividend to the U.S. "deemed paid" tax credit found in our NIRC and which Philippine tax law
corporation at 15% tax, or P11,250, will be withheld therefrom. Under the allows to Philippine corporations which have operations abroad (say, in the
aforementioned sections of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, U.S. United States) and which, therefore, pay income taxes to the US
corporation receiving the dividend can utilize as credit against its U.S. tax government.
payable on said dividends the amount of P30,000 composed of:
Section 30 (c) (3) and (8), NIRC, provides:
(1) The tax "deemed paid" or indirectly paid on the dividend arrived at as
follows: (d) Sec. 30. Deductions from Gross Income.—In computing net income,
there shall be allowed as deductions — . . .
P75,000 x P25,000 = P18,750
——— (c) Taxes. — . . .
100,000 **
xxx xxx xxx
(2) The amount of 15% of
P75,000 withheld = 11,250 (3) Credits against tax for taxes of foreign countries. — If the taxpayer
——— signifies in his return his desire to have the benefits of this paragraphs, the
P30,000 tax imposed by this Title shall be credited with . . .

The amount of P18,750 deemed paid and to be credited against the U.S. tax (a) Citizen and Domestic Corporation. — In the case of a citizen of the
on the dividends received by the U.S. corporation from a Philippine Philippines and of domestic corporation, the amount of net income, war
subsidiary is clearly more than 20% requirement of Presidential Decree profits or excess profits, taxes paid or accrued during the taxable year to
No. 369 as 20% of P75,000.00 the dividends to be remitted under the any foreign country. (Emphasis supplied)
above example, amounts to P15,000.00 only.
Under Section 30 (c) (3) (a), NIRC, above, the BIR must give a tax credit to a
In the light of the foregoing, BIR Ruling No. 75-005 dated September 10, Philippine corporation for taxes actually paid by it to the US government—
1975 is hereby amended in the sense that the dividends to be remitted by e.g., for taxes collected by the US government on dividend remittances to
your client to its parent company shall be subject to the withholding tax at the Philippine corporation. This Section of the NIRC is the equivalent of
the rate of 15% only. Section 901 of the US Tax Code.

This ruling shall have force and effect only for as long as the present Section 30 (c) (8), NIRC, is practically identical with Section 902 of the US
pertinent provisions of the U.S. Federal Tax Code, which are the bases of Tax Code, and provides as follows:
the ruling, are not revoked, amended and modified, the effect of which will
reduce the percentage of tax deemed paid and creditable against the U.S. (8) Taxes of foreign subsidiary. — For the purposes of this subsection a
tax on dividends remitted by a foreign corporation to a U.S. corporation. domestic corporation which owns a majority of the voting stock of a
(Emphasis supplied) foreign corporation from which it receives dividends in any taxable year
shall be deemed to have paid the same proportion of any income, war-
The 1976 Ruling was reiterated in, e.g., BIR Ruling dated 22 July 1981 profits, or excess-profits taxes paid by such foreign corporation to any
addressed to Basic Foods Corporation and BIR Ruling dated 20 October foreign country, upon or with respect to the accumulated profits of such
1987 addressed to Castillo, Laman, Tan and Associates. In other words, the foreign corporation from which such dividends were paid, which the
1976 Ruling of Hon. Efren I. Plana was reiterated by the BIR even as the amount of such dividends bears to the amount of such accumulated profits:
case at bar was pending before the CTA and this Court. Provided, That the amount of tax deemed to have been paid under this
subsection shall in no case exceed the same proportion of the tax against
TAXATION CASES |28

which credit is taken which the amount of such dividends bears to the We believe, in the first place, that we must distinguish between the legal
amount of the entire net income of the domestic corporation in which such question before this Court from questions of administrative
dividends are included. The term "accumulated profits" when used in this implementation arising after the legal question has been answered. The
subsection reference to a foreign corporation, means the amount of its basic legal issue is of course, this: which is the applicable dividend tax rate
gains, profits, or income in excess of the income, war-profits, and excess- in the instant case: the regular thirty-five percent (35%) rate or the
profits taxes imposed upon or with respect to such profits or income; and reduced fifteen percent (15%) rate? The question of whether or not P&G-
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall have full power to determine USA is in fact given by the US tax authorities a "deemed paid" tax credit in
from the accumulated profits of what year or years such dividends were the required amount, relates to the administrative implementation of the
paid; treating dividends paid in the first sixty days of any year as having applicable reduced tax rate.
been paid from the accumulated profits of the preceding year or years
(unless to his satisfaction shown otherwise), and in other respects treating In the second place, Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, does not in fact require that
dividends as having been paid from the most recently accumulated gains, the "deemed paid" tax credit shall have actually been granted before the
profits, or earnings. In the case of a foreign corporation, the income, war- applicable dividend tax rate goes down from thirty-five percent (35%) to
profits, and excess-profits taxes of which are determined on the basis of an fifteen percent (15%). As noted several times earlier, Section 24 (b) (1),
accounting period of less than one year, the word "year" as used in this NIRC, merely requires, in the case at bar, that the USA "shall allow a credit
subsection shall be construed to mean such accounting period. (Emphasis against the
supplied) tax due from [P&G-USA for] taxes deemed to have been paid in the
Philippines . . ." There is neither statutory provision nor revenue regulation
Under the above quoted Section 30 (c) (8), NIRC, the BIR must give a tax issued by the Secretary of Finance requiring the actual grant of the
credit to a Philippine parent corporation for taxes "deemed paid" by it, that "deemed paid" tax credit by the US Internal Revenue Service to P&G-USA
is, e.g., for taxes paid to the US by the US subsidiary of a Philippine-parent before the preferential fifteen percent (15%) dividend rate becomes
corporation. The Philippine parent or corporate stockholder is "deemed" applicable. Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, does not create a tax exemption nor
under our NIRC to have paid a proportionate part of the US corporate does it provide a tax credit; it is a provision which specifies when a
income tax paid by its US subsidiary, although such US tax was actually particular (reduced) tax rate is legally applicable.
paid by the subsidiary and not by the Philippine parent.
In the third place, the position originally taken by the Second Division
Clearly, the "deemed paid" tax credit which, under Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, results in a severe practical problem of administrative circularity. The
must be allowed by US law to P&G-USA, is the same "deemed paid" tax Second Division in effect held that the reduced dividend tax rate is not
credit that Philippine law allows to a Philippine corporation with a wholly- applicable until the US tax credit for "deemed paid" taxes is actually given
or majority-owned subsidiary in (for instance) the US. The "deemed paid" in the required minimum amount by the US Internal Revenue Service to
tax credit allowed in Section 902, US Tax Code, is no more a credit for P&G-USA. But, the US "deemed paid" tax credit cannot be given by the US
"phantom taxes" than is the "deemed paid" tax credit granted in Section 30 tax authorities unless dividends have actually been remitted to the US,
(c) (8), NIRC. which means that the Philippine dividend tax, at the rate here applicable,
was actually imposed and collected. 11 It is this practical or operating
III circularity that is in fact avoided by our BIR when it issues rulings that the
tax laws of particular foreign jurisdictions (e.g., Republic of Vanuatu 12
1. The Second Division of the Court, in holding that the applicable dividend Hongkong, 13 Denmark, 14 etc.) comply with the requirements set out in
tax rate in the instant case was the regular thirty-five percent (35%) rate Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, for applicability of the fifteen percent (15%) tax
rather than the reduced rate of fifteen percent (15%), held that P&G-Phil. rate. Once such a ruling is rendered, the Philippine subsidiary begins to
had failed to prove that its parent, P&G-USA, had in fact been given by the withhold at the reduced dividend tax rate.
US tax authorities a "deemed paid" tax credit in the amount required by
Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC. A requirement relating to administrative implementation is not properly
imposed as a condition for the applicability, as a matter of law, of a
particular tax rate. Upon the other hand, upon the determination or
TAXATION CASES |29

recognition of the applicability of the reduced tax rate, there is nothing to More simply put, Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, seeks to promote the in-flow of
prevent the BIR from issuing implementing regulations that would require foreign equity investment in the Philippines by reducing the tax cost of
P&G Phil., or any Philippine corporation similarly situated, to certify to the earning profits here and thereby increasing the net dividends remittable to
BIR the amount of the "deemed paid" tax credit actually subsequently the investor. The foreign investor, however, would not benefit from the
granted by the US tax authorities to P&G-USA or a US parent corporation reduction of the Philippine dividend tax rate unless its home country gives
for the taxable year involved. Since the US tax laws can and do change, such it some relief from double taxation (i.e., second-tier taxation) (the home
implementing regulations could also provide that failure of P&G-Phil. to country would simply have more "post-R.P. tax" income to subject to its
submit such certification within a certain period of time, would result in own taxing power) by allowing the investor additional tax credits which
the imposition of a deficiency assessment for the twenty (20) percentage would be applicable against the tax payable to such home country.
points differential. The task of this Court is to settle which tax rate is Accordingly, Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, requires the home or domiciliary
applicable, considering the state of US law at a given time. We should leave country to give the investor corporation a "deemed paid" tax credit at least
details relating to administrative implementation where they properly equal in amount to the twenty (20) percentage points of dividend tax
belong — with the BIR. foregone by the Philippines, in the assumption that a positive incentive
effect would thereby be felt by the investor.
2. An interpretation of a tax statute that produces a revenue flow for the
government is not, for that reason alone, necessarily the correct reading of The net effect upon the foreign investor may be shown arithmetically in the
the statute. There are many tax statutes or provisions which are designed, following manner:
not to trigger off an instant surge of revenues, but rather to achieve longer-
term and broader-gauge fiscal and economic objectives. The task of our P65.00 — Dividends remittable to P&G-USA (please
Court is to give effect to the legislative design and objectives as they are see page 392 above
written into the statute even if, as in the case at bar, some revenues have to - 9.75 — Reduced R.P. dividend tax withheld by P&G-Phil.
be foregone in that process. ———
P55.25 — Dividends actually remitted to P&G-USA
The economic objectives sought to be achieved by the Philippine
Government by reducing the thirty-five percent (35%) dividend rate to P55.25
fifteen percent (15%) are set out in the preambular clauses of P.D. No. 369 x 46% — Maximum US corporate income tax rate
which amended Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, into its present form: ———
P25.415—US corporate tax payable by P&G-USA
WHEREAS, it is imperative to adopt measures responsive to the without tax credits
requirements of a developing economy foremost of which is the financing
of economic development programs; P25.415
- 9.75 — US tax credit for RP dividend tax withheld by P&G-Phil.
WHEREAS, nonresident foreign corporations with investments in the at 15% (Section 901, US Tax Code)
Philippines are taxed on their earnings from dividends at the rate of 35%; ———
P15.66 — US corporate income tax payable after Section 901
WHEREAS, in order to encourage more capital investment for large ——— tax credit.
projects an appropriate tax need be imposed on dividends received by non-
resident foreign corporations in the same manner as the tax imposed on P55.25
interest on foreign loans; - 15.66
———
xxx xxx xxx P39.59 — Amount received by P&G-USA net of R.P. and U.S.
===== taxes without "deemed paid" tax credit.
(Emphasis supplied)
P25.415
TAXATION CASES |30

- 29.75 — "Deemed paid" tax credit under Section 902 US


——— Tax Code (please see page 18 above) The Tax Convention, at the same time, established a treaty obligation on
the part of the United States that it "shall allow" to a US parent corporation
- 0 - — US corporate income tax payable on dividends receiving dividends from its Philippine subsidiary "a [tax] credit for the
====== remitted by P&G-Phil. to P&G-USA after appropriate amount of taxes paid or accrued to the Philippines by the
Section 902 tax credit. Philippine [subsidiary] —.16 This is, of course, precisely the "deemed
paid" tax credit provided for in Section 902, US Tax Code, discussed above.
P55.25 — Amount received by P&G-USA net of RP and US Clearly, there is here on the part of the Philippines a deliberate undertaking
====== taxes after Section 902 tax credit. to reduce the regular dividend tax rate of twenty percent (20%) is a
maximum rate, there is still a differential or additional reduction of five (5)
It will be seen that the "deemed paid" tax credit allowed by Section 902, US percentage points which compliance of US law (Section 902) with the
Tax Code, could offset the US corporate income tax payable on the requirements of Section 24 (b) (1), NIRC, makes available in respect of
dividends remitted by P&G-Phil. The result, in fine, could be that P&G-USA dividends from a Philippine subsidiary.
would after US tax credits, still wind up with P55.25, the full amount of the
dividends remitted to P&G-USA net of Philippine taxes. In the calculation of We conclude that private respondent P&G-Phil, is entitled to the tax refund
the Philippine Government, this should encourage additional investment or tax credit which it seeks.
or re-investment in the Philippines by P&G-USA.
WHEREFORE, for all the foregoing, the Court Resolved to GRANT private
3. It remains only to note that under the Philippines-United States respondent's Motion for Reconsideration dated 11 May 1988, to SET ASIDE
Convention "With Respect to Taxes on Income," 15 the Philippines, by a the Decision of the and Division of the Court promulgated on 15 April
treaty commitment, reduced the regular rate of dividend tax to a maximum 1988, and in lieu thereof, to REINSTATE and AFFIRM the Decision of the
of twenty percent (20%) of the gross amount of dividends paid to US Court of Tax Appeals in CTA Case No. 2883 dated 31 January 1984 and to
parent corporations: DENY the Petition for Review for lack of merit. No pronouncement as to
costs.
Art 11. — Dividends
5. Republic vs. Ker & Company
xxx xxx xxx
G.R. No. L-21609 September 29, 1966
(2) The rate of tax imposed by one of the Contracting States on dividends
derived from sources within that Contracting State by a resident of the REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellant,
other Contracting State shall not exceed — vs.
KER & COMPANY, LTD., defendant-appellant.
(a) 25 percent of the gross amount of the dividend; or
Office of the Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellant.
(b) When the recipient is a corporation, 20 percent of the gross amount of Leido, Andrada, Perez and Associates for defendant-appellant.
the dividend if during the part of the paying corporation's taxable year
which precedes the date of payment of the dividend and during the whole
of its prior taxable year (if any), at least 10 percent of the outstanding
shares of the voting stock of the paying corporation was owned by the BENGZON, J.P., J.:
recipient corporation.
Ker & Co., Ltd., a domestic corporation, filed its income tax returns for the
xxx xxx xxx years 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950 on the following dates:
Year Date Filed
(Emphasis supplied) 1947 April 12, 1948
TAXATION CASES |31

1948 April 30, 1949 corresponding 50% surcharge, but it prayed for the payment of 5%
1949 May 15, 1950 surcharge for late payment and interest of 1% per month without however
1950 May 9, 1951 specifying from what date interest started to accrue.

It amended its income tax returns for 1948 and 1949 on May 11, 1949 and Summons was served not on the defendant taxpayer but upon Messrs.
June 30, 1950, respectively. Leido and Associates, its counsel in the proceedings before the Bureau of
Internal Revenue and the Court of Tax Appeals.
In 1953 the Bureau of Internal Revenue examined and audited Ker & Co.,
Ltd.'s returns and books of accounts and subsequently issued the following On April 14, 1962 Ker & Co., Ltd. through its counsel, Leido, Andrada, Perez
assessments for deficiency income tax: & Associates, moved for the dismissal of the complaint on the ground that
Year Amount Date Assessed the court did not acquire jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and
1947 P42,342.30 July 25, 1953 that plaintiff's cause of action has prescribed. This motion was denied and
1948 18,651.87 Feb. 16, 1953 defendant filed a motion for reconsideration. Resolution on said motion,
1949 139.67 Feb. 16, 1953 however, was deferred until trial of the case on the merits.
1950 12,813.00 Feb. 16, 1953
On May 18, 1962, Ker & Co., Ltd. filed its answer to the complaint
due and payable on dates indicated in the accompanying notices of interposing therein the defense set up in its motion to dismiss of April 14,
assessment. The assessments for 1948 and 1950 carried the surcharge of 1962.
50% authorized under Section 72 of the Tax Code for the filing of
fraudulent returns. On September 18, 1962 the Republic of the Philippines amended its
complaint, in answer to which Ker & Co., Ltd. adopted the same answer
Upon request of Ker & Co., Ltd., through Atty. Jose Leido, its counsel, the which it had filed on May 18, 1962.
Bureau of Internal Revenue reduced the assessments for the year 1947
from P42,342.30 to P27,026.28 and for the year 1950 from P12,813.00 to On January 30, 1963 the Court of First Instance rendered judgment, the
P8,542.00, imposed the 50% surcharge for the year 1947 and eliminated dispositive portion of which states:
the same surcharge from the assessment for the year 1950. The
assessments for years 1948 and 1949 remained the same. WHEREFORE, this Court dismisses the claim for the collection of deficiency
income taxes for 1947, but orders defendant taxpayer to pay the deficiency
On March 1, 1956 Ker & Co., Ltd. filed with the Court of Tax Appeals a income taxes for 1948, 1949 and 1950, in the amounts of P18,651.87,
petition for review with preliminary injunction. No preliminary injunction P139.67 and P8,542.00, respectively, plus 5% surcharge thereon on each
was issued, for said court dismissed the appeal for having been instituted amount and interest of 1% a month computed from March 27, 1962 and
beyond the 30-day period provided for in Section 11 of Republic Act 1125. until full payment thereof is made, plus the costs of suit.
We affirmed the order of dismissal of L-12396. 1
On February 20, 1963 the Republic of the Philippines filed a motion for
On March 15, 1962, the Bureau of Internal Revenue demanded payment of reconsideration contending that the right of the Commissioner of Internal
the aforesaid assessments together with a surcharge of 5% for late Revenue to collect the deficiency assessment for 1947 has not prescribed
payment and interest at the rate of 1% monthly. Ker & Co., Ltd. refused to by a lapse of merely five years and three months, because the taxpayer's
pay, instead in its letters dated March 28, 1962 and April 10, 1962 it set up income tax return was fraudulent in which case prescription sets in ten
the defense of prescription of the Commissioner's right to collect the tax. years from October 31, 1951, the date of discovery of the fraud, pursuant
Subsequently, the Republic of the Philippines filed on March 27, 1962 a to Section 332 (a) of the Tax Codes and that the payment of delinquency
complaint with the Court of First Instance of Manila seeking collection of interest of 1% per month should commence from the date it fell due as
the aforesaid deficiency income tax for the years 1947, 1948, 1949 and indicated in the assessment notices instead of on the date the complaint
1950. The complaint did not allege fraud in the filing of any of the income was filed.
tax returns for the years involved, nor did it pray for the payment of the
TAXATION CASES |32

On March 6, 1963 Ker & Co., Ltd. also filed a motion for reconsideration Revenue, by letter dated March 15, 1962, demanded the payment of the
reiterating its assertion that the Court of First Instance did not acquire deficiency income tax in question, it was Messrs. Leido, Andrada, Perez &
jurisdiction over its person, and maintaining that since the complaint was Associates who replied in behalf of Ker & Co., Ltd. in two letters, dated
filed nine years, one month and eleven days after the deficiency March 28, 1962 and April 10, 1962, both after the complaint in this case
assessments for 1948, 1949 and 1950 were made and since the filing of its was filed. At least therefore on April 2, 1962 when Messrs. Leido and
petition for review in the Court of Tax Appeals did not stop the running of Associates received the summons, they were still acting for and in behalf of
the period of limitations, the right of the Commissioner of Internal Ker & Co., Ltd. in connection with its tax liability involved in this case.
Revenue to collect the tax in question has prescribed. Perforce, they were the taxpayer's agent when summons was served.
Under Section 13 of Rule 7, aforequoted, service upon the agent of a
The two motions for reconsideration having been denied, both parties corporation is sufficient.
appealed directly to this Court.
We observe that the motion to dismiss filed on April 14, 1962, aside from
The issues in this case are: disputing the lower court's jurisdiction over defendant's person, prayed for
dismissal of the complaint on the ground that plaintiff's cause of action has
1. Did the Court of First Instance acquire jurisdiction over the person of prescribed. By interposing such second ground in its motion to dismiss,
defendant Ker & Co., Ltd.? . Ker & Co., Ltd. availed of an affirmative defense on the basis of which it
prayed the court to resolve controversy in its favor. For the court to validly
2. Did the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to assess decide the said plea of defendant Ker & Co., Ltd., it necessarily had to
deficiency income tax for the year 1947 prescribe? . acquire jurisdiction upon the latter's person, who, being the proponent of
the affirmative defense, should be deemed to have abandoned its special
3. Did the filing of a petition for review by the taxpayer in the Court of Tax appearance and voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the
Appeals suspend the running of the statute of limitations to collect the court.3
deficiency income for the years 1948, 1949 and 1950?
Voluntary appearance cures defects of summons, if any.4 Such defect, if any,
4. When did the delinquency interest on the deficiency income tax for the was further cured when defendant filed its answer to the complaint.5 A
years 1948, 1949 and 1950 accrue? defendant can not be permitted to speculate upon the judgment of the
court by objecting to the court's jurisdiction over its person if the judgment
First Issue is adverse to it, and acceding to jurisdiction over its person if and when the
judgment sustains its defenses.
Ker & Co., Ltd. maintains that the court a quo did not acquire jurisdiction
over its person inasmuch as summons was not served upon it but upon Second Issue
Messrs. Leido and Associates who do not come under any of the class of
persons upon whom summons should be served as enumerated in Section Ker & Co., Ltd. contends that under Section 331 of the Tax Code the right of
13, Rule 7 of the Rules of Court, 2 which reads: the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to assess against it a deficiency
income tax for the year 1947 has prescribed because the assessment was
SEC. 13. Service upon private domestic corporation or partnership.—If the issued on July 25, 1953 after a lapse of five years, three months and
defendant is a corporation formed under the laws of the Philippines or a thirteen days from the date (April 12, 1948) it filed its income tax return.
partnership duly registered, service may be made on the president, On the other hand, the Republic of the Philippines insists that the
manager, secretary, cashier, agent, or any of its directors. taxpayer's income tax return was fraudulent, therefore the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue may assess the tax within ten years from discovery of
Messrs. Leido and Associates acted as counsel for Ker Co., Ltd. when this the fraud on October 31, 1951 pursuant to Section 322(a) of the Tax Code.
tax case was in its administrative stage. The same counsel represented Ker
& Co., Ltd., when it appealed said case to the Court of Tax Appeals and later The stand of the Republic of the Philippines hinges on whether or not
to this Court. Subsequently, when the Deputy Commissioner of Internal taxpayer's income tax return for 1947 was fraudulent.
TAXATION CASES |33

By its actuation, the Republic of the Philippines should be considered to


The court a quo, confining itself to determining whether or not the have waived its right to object to the setting up of such defense.
assessment of the tax for 1947 was issued within the five-year period
provided for in Section 331 of the Tax Code, ruled that the right of the Third Issue
Commissioner of Internal Revenue to assess the tax has prescribed. Said
the lower court: Ker & Co., Ltd. impresses upon Us that since the Republic of the Philippines
filed the complaint for the collection of the deficiency income tax for the
The Court resolves the second issue in the negative, because Section 331 of years 1948, 1949 and 1950 only on March 27, 1962, or nine years, one
the Revenue Code explicitly provides, in mandatory terms, that "Internal month and eleven days from February 16, 1953, the date the tax was
Revenue taxes shall be assessed within 5 years after the return was filed, assessed, the right to collect the same has prescribed pursuant to Section
and no proceedings in court without assessment, for the collection of such 332 (c) of the Tax Code. The Republic of the Philippines however contends
taxes, shall be begun after expiration of such period. The attempt by the that the running of the prescriptive period was interrupted by the filing of
Commissioner of Internal Revenue to make an assessment on July 25, the taxpayer's petition for review in the Court of Tax Appeals on March 1,
1953, on the basis of a return filed on April 12, 1948, is an exercise of 1956.
authority against the aforequoted explicit and mandatory limitations of
statutory law. Settled in our system is the rule that acts committed against If the period during which the case was pending in the Court of Tax
the provisions of mandatory or prohibitory laws shall be void (Art. 5, New Appeals and in the Supreme Court were not counted in reckoning the
Civil Code). . . . prescriptive period, less than five years would have elapsed, hence, the
right to collect the tax has not prescribed.
Said court resolved the issue without touching upon fraudulence of the
return. The reason is that the complaint alleged no fraud, nor did the The taxpayer counters that the filing of the petition for review in the Court
plaintiff present evidence to prove fraud. of Tax Appeals could not have stopped the running of the prescriptive
period to collect because said court did not have jurisdiction over the case,
In reply to the lower court's conclusion, the Republic of the Philippines the appeal having been interposed beyond the 30-day period set forth in
maintains in its brief that Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a false return and since the Section 11 of Republic Act 1125. Precisely, it adds, the Tax Court dismissed
fraud penalty of 50% surcharge was imposed in the deficiency income tax the appeal for lack of jurisdiction and said dismissal was affirmed by the
assessment, which has become final and executory, the finding of the Supreme Court in L-12396 aforementioned.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue as to the existence of the fraud has also
become final and need not be proved. This contention suffers from a flaw Under Section 333 of the Tax Code, quoted hereunder:
in that it fails to consider the well-settled principle that fraud is a question
of fact6 which must be alleged and proved.7 Fraud is a serious charge and, SEC. 333. Suspension of running of statute.—The running of the statute of
to be sustained, it must be supported by clear and convincing proof.8 limitations provided in Section 331 or three hundred thirty-two on the
Accordingly, fraud should have been alleged and proved in the lower court. making of assessments and the beginning, of distraint or levy or a
On these premises We therefore sustain the ruling of the lower court upon proceeding in court for collection, in respect of any deficiency, shall be
the point of prescription. suspended for the period during which the Collector of Internal Revenue is
prohibited from making the assessment or beginning distraint or levy or a
It would be worth mentioning that since the assessment for deficiency proceeding in court, and for sixty days thereafter.
income tax for 1947 has become final and executory, Ker & Co., Ltd. may
not anymore raise defenses which go into the merits of the assessment, i.e., the running of the prescriptive period to collect the tax shall be suspended
prescription of the Commissioner's right to assess the tax. Such was our for the period during which the Commissioner of Internal Revenue is
ruling in previous cases.9 In this case however, Ker & Co., Ltd. raised the prohibited from beginning a distraint and levy or instituting a proceeding
defense of prescription in the proceedings below and the Republic of the in court, and for sixty days thereafter.
Philippines, instead of questioning the right of the defendant to raise such
defense, litigated on it and submitted the issue for resolution of the court.
TAXATION CASES |34

Did the pendency of the taxpayer's appeal in the Court of Tax Appeals and
in the Supreme Court have the effect of legally preventing the Thus, did the taxpayer produce the effect of temporarily staying the hands
Commissioner of Internal Revenue from instituting an action in the Court of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue simply through a choice of
of First Instance for the collection of the tax? Our view is that it did. remedy. And, if We were to sustain the taxpayer's stand, We would be
encouraging taxpayers to delay the payment of taxes in the hope of
From March 1, 1956 when Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a petition for review in the ultimately avoiding the same.
Court of Tax Appeals contesting the legality of the assessments in question,
until the termination of its appeal in the Supreme Court, the Commissioner Under the circumstances, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was in
of Internal Revenue was prevented, as recognized in this Court's ruling in effect prohibited from collecting the tax in question. This being so, the
Ledesma, et al. v. Court of Tax Appeals, 10 from filing an ordinary action in provisions of Section 333 of the Tax Code will apply.
the Court of First Instance to collect the tax. Besides, to do so would be to
violate the judicial policy of avoiding multiplicity of suits and the rule on lis Fourth Issue
pendens. 11
The Republic of the Philippines maintains that the delinquency interest on
It would be interesting to note that when the Commissioner of Internal the deficiency income tax for 1948, 1949 and 1950 accrued and should
Revenue issued the final deficiency assessments on January 5, 1954, he had commence from the date of the assessments as shown in the assessment
already lost, by prescription, the right to collect the tax (except that for notices, pursuant to Section 51(e) of the Tax Code, instead of from the date
1950) by the summary method of warrant of distraint and levy. Ker & Co., the complaint was filed as determined in the decision appealed from.
Ltd. immediately thereafter requested suspension of the collection of the
tax without penalty incident to late payment pending the filing of a Section 51 (e) of the Tax Code states:
memorandum in support of its views. As requested, no tax was collected.
On May 22, 1954 the projected memorandum was filed, but as of that date SEC. 51(e). Surcharge and interest in case of delinquency.—To any sum or
the Commissioner's right to collect by warrant of distraint and levy the sums due and unpaid after the dates prescribed in subsections (b), (c) and
deficiency tax for 1950 had already prescribed. So much so, that on March (d) for the payment of the same, there shall be added the sum of five per
1, 1956 when Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a petition for review in the Court of Tax centum on the amount of tax unpaid and interest at the rate of one per
Appeals, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue had but one remedy left to centum a month upon said tax from the time the same became due, except
collect the tax, that is, by judicial action. 12 However, as stated, an from the estates of insane, deceased, or insolvent persons. (emphasis
independent ordinary action in the Court of First Instance was not supplied)
available to the Commissioner pursuant to Our ruling in Ledesma, et al. v.
Court of Tax Appeals, supra, in view of the pendency of the taxpayer's Exhibit "F" — the letter of assessment — shows that the deficiency income
petition for review in the Court of Tax Appeals. Precisely he urgently filed a tax for 1948 and 1949 became due on March 15, 1953 and that for 1950
motion to dismiss the taxpayer's petition for review with a view to accrued on February 15, 1954 in accordance with Section 51(d) of the Tax
terminating therein the proceedings in the shortest possible time in order Code. Since the tax in question remained unpaid, delinquency interest
that he could file a collection case in the Court of First Instance before his accrued and became due starting from said due dates. The decision
right to do so is cut off by the passage of time. As moved, the Tax Court appealed from should therefore be modified accordingly.
dismissed the case and Ker & Co., Ltd. appealed to the Supreme Court. By
the time the Supreme Court affirmed the order of dismissal of the Court of WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is affirmed with the modification
Tax Appeals in L-12396 on January 31, 1962 more than five years had that the delinquency interest at the rate of 1% per month shall be
elapsed since the final assessments were made on January 5, 1954. computed from March 15, 1953 for the deficiency income tax for 1948 and
Thereafter, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue demanded extra- 1949 and from February 15, 1954 for the deficiency income tax for 1950.
judicially the payment of the deficiency tax in question and in reply the With costs against Ker & Co., Ltd. So ordered.
taxpayer, by its letter dated March 28, 1962, advised the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue that the right to collect the tax has prescribed pursuant Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Barrera, Dizon, Regala, Makalintal, Zaldivar,
to Section 332 (c) of the Tax Code.1awphïîl.neè t Sanchez and Castro, JJ., concur.
TAXATION CASES |35

financial advisor or consultant for the issuance and flotation of bonds to


6. Mamba vs. Lara fund the priority projects of the governor without cost and commitment.

G.R. No. 165109 December 14, 2009 On November 19, 2001, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, through Resolution
No. 290-2001, 5 ratified the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) 6 entered
MANUEL N. MAMBA, RAYMUND P. GUZMAN and LEONIDES N. FAUSTO, into by Gov. Lara and Preferred Ventures Corporation. The MOA provided
Petitioners, that the provincial government of Cagayan shall pay Preferred Ventures
vs. Corporation a one-time fee of 3% of the amount of bonds floated.
EDGAR R. LARA, JENERWIN C. BACUYAG, WILSON O. PUYAWAN,
ALDEGUNDO Q. CAYOSA, JR., NORMAN A. AGATEP, ESTRELLA P. On February 15, 2002, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan approved Resolution
FERNANDEZ, VILMER V. VILORIA, BAYLON A. CALAGUI, CECILIA MAEVE T. No. 2002-061-A 7 authorizing Gov. Lara to negotiate, sign and execute
LAYOS, PREFERRED VENTURES CORP., ASSET BUILDERS CORP., RIZAL contracts or agreements pertinent to the flotation of the bonds of the
COMMERCIAL BANKING CORPORATION, MALAYAN INSURANCE CO., and provincial government in an amount not to exceed P500 million for the
LAND BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondents. construction and improvement of priority projects to be approved by the
Sangguniang Panlalawigan.
DECISION
On May 20, 2002, the majority of the members of the Sangguniang
DEL CASTILLO, J.: Panlalawigan of Cagayan approved Ordinance No. 19-2002, 8 authorizing
the bond flotation of the provincial government in an amount not to exceed
The decision to entertain a taxpayer’s suit is discretionary upon the Court. P500 million to fund the construction and development of the new
It can choose to strictly apply the rule or take a liberal stance depending on Cagayan Town Center. The Resolution likewise granted authority to Gov.
the controversy involved. Advocates for a strict application of the rule Lara to negotiate, sign and execute contracts and agreements necessary
believe that leniency would open floodgates to numerous suits, which and related to the bond flotation subject to the approval and ratification by
could hamper the government from performing its job. Such possibility, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan.
however, is not only remote but also negligible compared to what is at
stake - "the lifeblood of the State". For this reason, when the issue hinges On October 20, 2003, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan approved Resolution
on the illegal disbursement of public funds, a liberal approach should be No. 350-2003 9 ratifying the Cagayan Provincial Bond Agreements entered
preferred as it is more in keeping with truth and justice. into by the provincial government, represented by Gov. Lara, to wit:

This Petition for Review on Certiorari with prayer for a Temporary a. Trust Indenture with the Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC)
Restraining Order/Writ of Preliminary Injunction, under Rule 45 of the – Trust and Investment Division and Malayan Insurance Company, Inc.
Rules of Court, seeks to set aside the April 27, 2004 Order 1 of the Regional (MICO).
Trial Court (RTC), Branch 5, Tuguegarao City, dismissing the Petition for
Annulment of Contracts and Injunction with prayer for the issuance of a b. Deed of Assignment by way of security with the RCBC and the Land Bank
Temporary Restraining Order/Writ of Preliminary Injunction, 2 docketed of the Philippines (LBP).
as Civil Case No. 6283. Likewise assailed in this Petition is the August 20,
2004 Resolution 3 of RTC, Branch 1, Tuguegarao City denying the Motion c. Transfer and Paying Agency Agreement with the RCBC – Trust and
for Reconsideration of the dismissal. Investment Division.

Factual Antecedents d. Guarantee Agreement with the RCBC – Trust and Investment Division
and MICO.
On November 5, 2001, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Cagayan passed
Resolution No. 2001-272 4 authorizing Governor Edgar R. Lara (Gov. Lara) e. Underwriting Agreement with RCBC Capital Corporation.
to engage the services of and appoint Preferred Ventures Corporation as
TAXATION CASES |36

On even date, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan also approved Resolution No.


351-2003, 10 ratifying the Agreement for the Planning, Design, In response to the petition, public respondents filed an Answer with
Construction, and Site Development of the New Cagayan Town Center 11 Motion to Dismiss, 23 raising the following defenses: a) petitioners are not
entered into by the provincial government, represented by Gov. Lara and the proper parties or they lack locus standi in court; b) the action is barred
Asset Builders Corporation, represented by its President, Mr. Rogelio P. by the rule on state immunity from suit and c) the issues raised are not
Centeno. justiciable questions but purely political.

On May 20, 2003, Gov. Lara issued the Notice of Award to Asset Builders For its part, respondent Preferred Ventures Corporation filed a Motion to
Corporation, giving to the latter the planning, design, construction and site Dismiss 24 on the following grounds: a) petitioners have no cause of action
development of the town center project for a fee of P213,795,732.39. 12 for injunction; b) failure to join an indispensable party; c) lack of
personality to sue and d) lack of locus standi. Respondent MICO likewise
Proceedings before the Regional Trial Court filed a Motion to Dismiss 25 raising the grounds of lack of cause of action
and legal standing. Respondent RCBC similarly argued in its Motion to
On December 12, 2003, petitioners Manuel N. Mamba, Raymund P. Guzman Dismiss 26 that: a) petitioners are not the real parties-in-interest or have
and Leonides N. Fausto filed a Petition for Annulment of Contracts and no legal standing to institute the petition; b) petitioners have no cause of
Injunction with prayer for a Temporary Restraining Order/Writ of action as the flotation of the bonds are within the right and power of both
Preliminary Injunction 13 against Edgar R. Lara, Jenerwin C. Bacuyag, respondent RCBC and the province of Cagayan and c) the viability of the
Wilson O. Puyawan, Aldegundo Q. Cayosa, Jr., Norman A. Agatep, Estrella P. construction of a town center is not a justiciable question but a political
Fernandez, Vilmer V. Viloria, Baylon A. Calagui, Cecilia Maeve T. Layos, question.
Preferred Ventures Corporation, Asset Builders Corporation, RCBC, MICO
and LBP.1avvphi1 Respondent Asset Builders Corporation, on the other hand, filed an Answer
27 interposing special and affirmative defenses of lack of legal standing
At the time of the filing of the petition, Manuel N. Mamba was the and cause of action. Respondent LBP also filed an Answer 28 alleging in the
Representative of the 3rd Congressional District of the province of Cagayan main that petitioners have no cause of action against it as it is not an
14 while Raymund P. Guzman and Leonides N. Fausto were members of the indispensable party or a necessary party to the case.
Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Cagayan. 15
Two days after the filing of respondents’ respective memoranda on the
Edgar R. Lara was sued in his capacity as governor of Cagayan, 16 while issues raised during the hearing of the special and/or affirmative defenses,
Jenerwin C. Bacuyag, Wilson O. Puyawan, Aldegundo Q. Cayosa, Jr., Norman petitioners filed a Motion to Admit Amended Petition 29 attaching thereto
A. Agatep, Estrella P. Fernandez, Vilmer V. Viloria, Baylon A. Calagui and the amended petition. 30 Public respondents opposed the motion for the
Cecilia Maeve T. Layos were sued as members of the Sangguniang following reasons: 1) the motion was belatedly filed; 2) the Amended
Panlalawigan of Cagayan. 17 Respondents Preferred Ventures Corporation, Petition is not sufficient in form and in substance; 3) the motion is patently
Asset Builders Corporation, RCBC, MICO and LBP were all impleaded as dilatory and 4) the Amended Petition was filed to cure the defect in the
indispensable or necessary parties. original petition. 31

Respondent Preferred Ventures Corporation is the financial advisor of the Petitioners also filed a Consolidated Opposition to the Motion to Dismiss
province of Cagayan regarding the bond flotation undertaken by the 32 followed by supplemental pleadings 33 in support of their prayer for a
province. 18 Respondent Asset Builders Corporation was awarded the writ of preliminary injunction.
right to plan, design, construct and develop the proposed town center. 19
Respondent RCBC, through its Trust and Investment Division, is the trustee On April 27, 2004, the RTC issued the assailed Order denying the Motion to
of the seven-year bond flotation undertaken by the province for the Admit Amended Petition and dismissing the petition for lack of cause of
construction of the town center, 20 while respondent MICO is the action. It ruled that:
guarantor. 21 Lastly, respondent LBP is the official depositary bank of the
province. 22
TAXATION CASES |37

The language of Secs. 2 & 3 of Rule 10 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure legislative or [to the] executive branch of the government (Nuclear Free
dealing on the filing of an amended pleading is quite clear. As such, the Phils. Coalition vs. NPC, 141 SCRA 307 (1986); Torres vs. Gonzales, 152
Court rules that the motion was belatedly filed. The granting of leave to file SCRA 272; Citizen’s Alliance for Consumer Protection vs. Energy
amended pleadings is a matter peculiarly within the sound discretion of Regulatory Board, G.R. No. 78888-90, June 23, 1988).
the trial court. But the rule allowing amendments to pleadings is subject to
the general but inflexible limitation that the cause of action or defense shall The citation made by the provincial government[, to] which this Court is
not be substantially changed or the theory of the case altered to the inclined to agree, is that the matter falls under the discretion of another
prejudice of the other party (Avecilla vs. Yatcvo, 103 Phil. 666). department, hence the decision reached is in the category of a political
question and consequently may not be the subject of judicial jurisdiction
On the assumption that the controversy presents justiciable issues which (Cruz in Political Law, 1998 Ed., page 81) is correct.
this Court may take cognizance of, petitioners in the present case who
presumably presented legitimate interests in the controversy are not It is [a] well-recognized principle that purely administrative and
parties to the questioned contract. Contracts produce effect as between the discretionary functions may not be interfered with by the courts (Adm.
parties who execute them. Only a party to the contract can maintain an Law Test & Cases, 2001 Ed., De Leon, De Leon, Jr.).
action to enforce the obligations arising under said contract (Young vs. CA,
169 SCRA 213). Since a contract is binding only upon the parties thereto, a The case therefore calls for the doctrine of ripeness for judicial review. This
third person cannot ask for its rescission if it is in fraud of his rights. One determines the point at which courts may review administrative action.
who is not a party to a contract has no rights under such contract and even The basic principle of ripeness is that the judicial machinery should be
if the contrary may be voidable, its nullity can be asserted only by one who conserved for problems which are real and present or imminent and
is a party thereto; a third person would have absolutely no personality to should not be squandered on problems which are future, imaginary or
ask for the annulment (Wolfson vs. Estate of Martinez, 20 Phil. 340; Ibanñ ez remote. This case is not ripe for judicial determination since there is no
vs. Hongkong & Shanghai Bank, 22 Phil. 572; Ayson vs. CA, G.R. Nos. L-6501 imminently x x x substantial injury to the petitioners.
& 6599, May 21, 1955).
In other words, the putting up of the New Cagayan Town Center by the
It was, however, held that a person who is not a party obliged principally or province over the land fully owned by it and the concomitant contracts
subsidiarily in a contract may exercise an action for nullity of the contract if entered into by the same is within the bounds of its corporate power, an
he is prejudiced in his rights with respect to one of the contracting parties undertaking which falls within the ambit of its discretion and therefore a
and can show the detriment which would positively result to him from the purely political issue which is beyond the province of the court x x x.
contract in which he had no intervention (Banñ ez vs. CA, 59 SCRA 15; [Consequently, the court cannot,] in any manner, take judicial cognizance
Anyong Hsan vs. CA, 59 SCRA 110, 112-113; Leodovica vs. CA, 65 SCRA over it. The act of the provincial government was in pursuance of the
154-155). In the case at bar, petitioners failed to show that they were mandate of the Local Government Code of 1991.
prejudiced in their rights [or that a] detriment x x x would positively result
to them. Hence, they lack locus standi in court. xxxx

xxxx Indeed, adjudication of the procedural issues presented for resolution by


the present action would be a futile exercise in exegesis.
To the mind of the Court, procedural matters in the present controversy
may be dispensed with, stressing that the instant case is a political What defeats the plea of the petitioners for the issuance of a writ of
question, a question which the court cannot, in any manner, take judicial preliminary injunction is the fact that their averments are merely
cognizance. Courts will not interfere with purely political questions speculative and founded on conjectures. An injunction is not intended to
because of the principle of separation of powers (Tanñ ada vs. Cuenco, 103 protect contingent or future rights nor is it a remedy to enforce an abstract
Phil. 1051). Political questions are those questions which, under the right (Cerebo vs. Dictado, 160 SCRA 759; Ulang vs. CA, 225 SCRA 637). An
Constitution, are to be decided by the people in their sovereign capacity or injunction, whether preliminary or final, will not issue to protect a right
in regard to which full discretionary authority has been delegated to the not in in esse and which may never arise, or to restrain an act which does
TAXATION CASES |38

not give rise to a cause of action. The complainant’s right on title, moreover, A. The lower court decided a question of substance in a way not in accord
must be clear and unquestioned [since] equity, as a rule, will not take with law and with the applicable decision of the Supreme Court, and
cognizance of suits to establish title and will not lend its preventive aid by
injunction where the complainant’s title or right is doubtful or disputed. B. The lower court has so far departed from the accepted and usual course
The possibility of irreparable damage, without proof of violation of an of judicial proceedings as to call for an exercise of the power of supervision
actual existing right, is no ground for injunction being a mere damnum, in that:
absque injuria (Talisay-Silay Milling Company, Inc. vs. CFI of Negros
Occidental, et. al. 42 SCRA 577, 582). I. It denied locus standi to petitioners;

xxxx II. [It] determined that the matter of contract entered into by the provincial
government is in the nature of a political question;
For lack of cause of action, the case should be dismissed.
III. [It] denied the admission of Amended Petition; and
The facts and allegations [necessarily] suggest also that this court may
dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction. IV. [It] found a defect of substance in the petitioners’ Motion for
Reconsideration. 38
The rule has to be so because it can motu propio dismiss it as its only
jurisdiction is to dismiss it if it has no jurisdiction. This is in line with the Our Ruling
ruling in Andaya vs. Abadia, 46 SCAD 1036, G.R. No. 104033, Dec. 27, 1993
where the court may dismiss a complaint even without a motion to dismiss The petition is partially meritorious.
or answer.
Petitioners have legal standing to sue as taxpayers
Upon the foregoing considerations, the case is hereby dismissed without
costs. A taxpayer is allowed to sue where there is a claim that public funds are
illegally disbursed, or that the public money is being deflected to any
SO ORDERED. 34 improper purpose, or that there is wastage of public funds through the
enforcement of an invalid or unconstitutional law. 39 A person suing as a
Petitioners filed a Motion for Reconsideration 35 to which respondents taxpayer, however, must show that the act complained of directly involves
filed their respective Oppositions. 36 Petitioners then filed a Motion to the illegal disbursement of public funds derived from taxation. 40 He must
Inhibit, which the court granted. Accordingly, the case was re-raffled to also prove that he has sufficient interest in preventing the illegal
Branch 1 of the RTC of Tuguegarao City. 37 expenditure of money raised by taxation and that he will sustain a direct
injury because of the enforcement of the questioned statute or contract. 41
On August 20, 2004, Branch 1 of the RTC of Tuguegarao City issued a In other words, for a taxpayer’s suit to prosper, two requisites must be met:
Resolution denying petitioners’ plea for reconsideration. The court found (1) public funds derived from taxation are disbursed by a political
the motion to be a mere scrap of paper as the notice of hearing was subdivision or instrumentality and in doing so, a law is violated or some
addressed only to the Clerk of Court in violation of Section 5, Rule 15 of the irregularity is committed and (2) the petitioner is directly affected by the
Rules of Court. As to the merits, the court sustained the findings of Branch alleged act. 42
5 that petitioners lack legal standing to sue and that the issue involved is
political. In light of the foregoing, it is apparent that contrary to the view of the RTC,

Issues a taxpayer need not be a party to the contract to challenge its validity. 43
As long as taxes are involved, people have a right to question contracts
Hence, the present recourse where petitioners argue that: entered into by the government.
TAXATION CASES |39

In this case, although the construction of the town center would be Another point to consider is that local government units now possess more
primarily sourced from the proceeds of the bonds, which respondents powers, authority and resources at their disposal, 56 which in the hands of
insist are not taxpayer’s money, a government support in the amount of unscrupulous officials may be abused and misused to the detriment of the
P187 million would still be spent for paying the interest of the bonds. 44 In public. To protect the interest of the people and to prevent taxes from
fact, a Deed of Assignment 45 was executed by the governor in favor of being squandered or wasted under the guise of government projects, a
respondent RCBC over the Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) and other liberal approach must therefore be adopted in determining locus standi in
revenues of the provincial government as payment and/or security for the public suits.
obligations of the provincial government under the Trust Indenture
Agreement dated September 17, 2003. Records also show that on March 4, In view of the foregoing, we are convinced that petitioners have sufficient
2004, the governor requested the Sangguniang Panlalawigan to standing to file the present suit. Accordingly, they should be given the
appropriate an amount of P25 million for the interest of the bond. 46 opportunity to present their case before the RTC.
Clearly, the first requisite has been met.
Having resolved the core issue, we shall now proceed to the remaining
As to the second requisite, the court, in recent cases, has relaxed the issues.
stringent "direct injury test" bearing in mind that locus standi is a
procedural technicality. 47 By invoking "transcendental importance", The controversy involved is justiciable
"paramount public interest", or "far-reaching implications", ordinary
citizens and taxpayers were allowed to sue even if they failed to show A political question is a question of policy, which is to be decided by the
direct injury. 48 In cases where serious legal issues were raised or where people in their sovereign capacity or by the legislative or the executive
public expenditures of millions of pesos were involved, the court did not branch of the government to which full discretionary authority has been
hesitate to give standing to taxpayers. 49 delegated. 57

We find no reason to deviate from the jurisprudential trend. In filing the instant case before the RTC, petitioners seek to restrain public
respondents from implementing the bond flotation and to declare null and
To begin with, the amount involved in this case is substantial. Under the void all contracts related to the bond flotation and construction of the town
various agreements entered into by the governor, which were ratified by center. In the petition before the RTC, they alleged grave abuse of
the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the provincial government of Cagayan discretion and clear violations of law by public respondents. They put in
would incur the following costs: 50 issue the overpriced construction of the town center; the grossly
Compensation to Preferred Ventures - P 6,150,000.00 disadvantageous bond flotation; the irrevocable assignment of the
(3% of P205M) 51 Resolution No. 290-2001 provincial government’s annual regular income, including the IRA, to
Management and Underwriting Fees - 3,075,000.00 respondent RCBC to cover and secure the payment of the bonds floated;
(1.5% of P205M) 52 and the lack of consultation and discussion with the community regarding
Documentary Tax - 1,537,500.00 the proposed project, as well as a proper and legitimate bidding for the
(0.75% of P205M) 53 construction of the town center.
Guarantee Fee 54 - 7,350,000.00
Construction and Design of town center 55 - 213,795,732.39 Obviously, the issues raised in the petition do not refer to the wisdom but
Total Cost - P231,908,232.39 to the legality of the acts complained of. Thus, we find the instant
controversy within the ambit of judicial review. Besides, even if the issues
What is more, the provincial government would be shelling out a total were political in nature, it would still come within our powers of review
amount of P187 million for the period of seven years by way of subsidy for under the expanded jurisdiction conferred upon us by Section 1, Article
the interest of the bonds. Without a doubt, the resolution of the present VIII of the Constitution, which includes the authority to determine whether
petition is of paramount importance to the people of Cagayan who at the grave abuse of discretion amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction has
end of the day would bear the brunt of these agreements. been committed by any branch or instrumentality of the government. 58
TAXATION CASES |40

The Motion to Admit Amended Petition was properly denied the Regional Trial Court of Tuguegarao City are hereby REVERSED and SET
ASIDE insofar as the dismissal of the petition is concerned. Accordingly, the
However, as to the denial of petitioners’ Motion to Admit Amended case is hereby REMANDED to the court a quo for further proceedings.
Petition, we find no reason to reverse the same. The inclusion of the
province of Cagayan as a petitioner would not only change the theory of SO ORDERED.
the case but would also result in an absurd situation. The provincial
government, if included as a petitioner, would in effect be suing itself G.R. No. 191667 April 17, 2013
considering that public respondents are being sued in their official
capacity.
LAND BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES, Petitioner,
In any case, there is no need to amend the petition because petitioners, as vs.
we have said, have legal standing to sue as taxpayers. EDUARDO M. CACAYURAN, Respondent.

Section 5, Rule 15 of the Rules of Court was substantially complied with DECISION

This brings us to the fourth and final issue. PERLAS-BERNABE, J.:


A perusal of the Motion for Reconsideration filed by petitioners would
show that the notice of hearing was addressed only to the Clerk of Court in Assailed in this Petition for Review on Certiorari 1 is the March 26, 2010 Decision2 of
violation of Section 5, Rule 15 of the Rules of Court, which requires the the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV. No. 89732 which affirmed with modification
notice of hearing to be addressed to all parties concerned. This defect, the April 10, 2007 Decision3 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Agoo, La Union,
however, did not make the motion a mere scrap of paper. The rule is not a Branch 31, declaring inter alia the nullity of the loan agreements entered into by
ritual to be followed blindly. 59 The purpose of a notice of hearing is simply petitioner Land Bank of the Philippines (Land Bank) and the Municipality of Agoo,
to afford the adverse parties a chance to be heard before a motion is La Union (Municipality).
resolved by the court. 60 In this case, respondents were furnished copies of
the motion, and consequently, notified of the scheduled hearing. Counsel The Facts
for public respondents in fact moved for the postponement of the hearing,
which the court granted. 61 Moreover, respondents were afforded From 2005 to 2006, the Municipality’s Sangguniang Bayan (SB) passed certain
procedural due process as they were given sufficient time to file their resolutions to implement a multi-phased plan (Redevelopment Plan) to redevelop
respective comments or oppositions to the motion. From the foregoing, it is the Agoo Public Plaza (Agoo Plaza) where the Imelda Garden and Jose Rizal
clear that the rule requiring notice to all parties was substantially complied Monument were situated.
with. 62 In effect, the defect in the Motion for Reconsideration was cured.

We cannot overemphasize that procedural rules are mere tools to aid the To finance phase 1 of the said plan, the SB initially passed Resolution No. 68-
courts in the speedy, just and inexpensive resolution of cases. 63 20054 on April 19, 2005, authorizing then Mayor Eufranio Eriguel (Mayor Eriguel) to
Procedural defects or lapses, if negligible, should be excused in the higher obtain a loan from Land Bank and incidental thereto, mortgage a 2,323.75 square
interest of justice as technicalities should not override the merits of the meter lot situated at the southeastern portion of the Agoo Plaza (Plaza Lot) as
case. Dismissal of cases due to technicalities should also be avoided to collateral. To serve as additional security, it further authorized the assignment of a
afford the parties the opportunity to present their case. Courts must be portion of its internal revenue allotment (IRA) and the monthly income from the
reminded that the swift unclogging of the dockets although a laudable proposed project in favor of Land Bank.5 The foregoing terms were confirmed,
objective must not be done at the expense of substantial justice. 64 approved and ratified on October 4, 2005 through Resolution No. 139-
2005.6 Consequently, on November 21, 2005, Land Bank extended a ₱4,000,000.00
WHEREFORE, the instant Petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The April 27, loan in favor of the Municipality (First Loan), 7 the proceeds of which were used to
2004 Order of Branch 5 and the August 20, 2004 Resolution of Branch 1 of
TAXATION CASES |41

construct ten (10) kiosks at the northern and southern portions of the Imelda For its part, Land Bank claimed that it is not privy to the Implicated Officers’ acts of
Garden. After completion, these kiosks were rented out. 8 destroying the Agoo Plaza. It further asserted that Cacayuran did not have a cause of
action against it since he was not privy to any of the Subject Loans. 19
On March 7, 2006, the SB passed Resolution No. 58-2006,9 approving the
construction of a commercial center on the Plaza Lot as part of phase II of the During the pendency of the proceedings, the construction of the commercial center
Redevelopment Plan. To finance the project, Mayor Eriguel was again authorized to was completed and the said structure later became known as the Agoo’s People
obtain a loan from Land Bank, posting as well the same securities as that of the First Center (APC).
Loan. All previous representations and warranties of Mayor Eriguel related to the
negotiation and obtention of the new loan10were ratified on September 5, 2006 On May 8, 2007, the SB passed Municipal Ordinance No. 02-2007,20 declaring the
through Resolution No. 128-2006.11 In consequence, Land Bank granted a second area where the APC stood as patrimonial property of the Municipality.
loan in favor of the Municipality on October 20, 2006 in the principal amount of
₱28,000,000.00 (Second Loan).12
The Ruling of the RTC
Unlike phase 1 of the Redevelopment Plan, the construction of the commercial
center at the Agoo Plaza was vehemently objected to by some residents of the In its Decision dated April 10, 2007,21 the RTC ruled in favor of Cacayuran, declaring
Municipality. Led by respondent Eduardo Cacayuran (Cacayuran), these residents the nullity of the Subject Loans.22 It found that the resolutions approving the said
claimed that the conversion of the Agoo Plaza into a commercial center, as funded by loans were passed in a highly irregular manner and thus, ultra vires; as such, the
the proceeds from the First and Second Loans (Subject Loans), were "highly Municipality is not bound by the same.23 Moreover, it found that the Plaza Lot is
irregular, violative of the law, and detrimental to public interests, and will result to proscribed from collateralization given its nature as property for public use. 24
wanton desecration of the said historical and public park." 13 The foregoing was
embodied in a Manifesto,14 launched through a signature campaign conducted by the Aggrieved, Land Bank filed its Notice of Appeal on April 23, 2007. 25 On the other
residents and Cacayuran. hand, the Implicated Officers’ appeal was deemed abandoned and dismissed for
their failure to file an appellants’ brief despite due notice. 26 In this regard, only Land
In addition, Cacayuran wrote a letter15 dated December 8, 2006 addressed to Mayor Bank’s appeal was given due course by the CA.
Eriguel, Vice Mayor Antonio Eslao (Vice Mayor Eslao), and the members of the SB
namely, Violeta Laroya-Balbin, Jaime Boado, Jr., Rogelio De Vera, James Dy, Crisogono Ruling of the CA
Colubong, Ricardo Fronda, Josephus Komiya, Erwina Eriguel, Felizardo Villanueva,
and Gerard Mamuyac (Implicated Officers), expressing the growing public clamor In its Decision dated March 26, 2010,27 the CA affirmed with modification the RTC’s
against the conversion of the Agoo Plaza into a commercial center. He then ruling, excluding Vice Mayor Eslao from any personal liability arising from the
requested the foregoing officers to furnish him certified copies of various documents Subject Loans.28
related to the aforementioned conversion including, among others, the resolutions
approving the Redevelopment Plan as well as the loan agreements for the sake of
public information and transparency. It held, among others, that: (1) Cacayuran had locus standi to file his complaint,
considering that (a) he was born, raised and a bona fide resident of the Municipality;
and (b) the issue at hand involved public interest of transcendental
Unable to get any response, Cacayuran, invoking his right as a taxpayer, filed a importance;29 (2) Resolution Nos. 68-2005, 139-2005, 58-2006, 128-2006 and all
Complaint16 against the Implicated Officers and Land Bank, assailing, among others, other related resolutions (Subject Resolutions) were invalidly passed due to the SB’s
the validity of the Subject Loans on the ground that the Plaza Lot used as collateral non-compliance with certain sections of Republic Act No. 7160, otherwise known as
thereof is property of public dominion and therefore, beyond the commerce of the "Local Government Code of 1991" (LGC); (3) the Plaza Lot, which served as
man.17 collateral for the Subject Loans, is property of public dominion and thus, cannot be
appropriated either by the State or by private persons; 30 and (4) the Subject Loans
Upon denial of the Motion to Dismiss dated December 27, 2006, 18 the Implicated are ultra vires because they were transacted without proper authority and their
Officers and Land Bank filed their respective Answers. collateralization constituted improper disbursement of public funds.
TAXATION CASES |42

Dissatisfied, Land Bank filed the instant petition. be posted as a security, its collateralization should only be deemed effective during
the incumbency of the public officers who approved the same, else those who
Issues Before the Court succeed them be effectively deprived of its use.

The following issues have been raised for the Court’s resolution: (1) whether In any event, it is observed that the proceeds from the Subject Loans had already
Cacayuran has standing to sue; (2) whether the Subject Resolutions were validly been converted into public funds by the Municipality’s receipt thereof. Funds coming
passed; and (3) whether the Subject Loans are ultra vires. from private sources become impressed with the characteristics of public funds
when they are under official custody.33
The Court’s Ruling
Accordingly, the first requisite has been clearly met.
The petition lacks merit.
Second, as a resident-taxpayer of the Municipality, Cacayuran is directly affected by
the conversion of the Agoo Plaza which was funded by the proceeds of the Subject
A. Cacayuran’s standing to sue Loans. It is well-settled that public plazas are properties for public use 34 and
therefore, belongs to the public dominion. 35 As such, it can be used by anybody and
Land Bank claims that Cacayuran did not have any standing to contest the no one can exercise over it the rights of a private owner.36 In this light, Cacayuran
construction of the APC as it was funded through the proceeds coming from the had a direct interest in ensuring that the Agoo Plaza would not be exploited for
Subject Loans and not from public funds. Besides, Cacayuran was not even a party to commercial purposes through the APC’s construction. Moreover, Cacayuran need not
any of the Subject Loans and is thus, precluded from questioning the same. be privy to the Subject Loans in order to proffer his objections thereto. In Mamba v.
Lara, it has been held that a taxpayer need not be a party to the contract to challenge
The argument is untenable. its validity; as long as taxes are involved, people have a right to question contracts
entered into by the government.37
It is hornbook principle that a taxpayer is allowed to sue where there is a claim that
public funds are illegally disbursed, or that public money is being deflected to any Therefore, as the above-stated requisites obtain in this case, Cacayuran has standing
improper purpose, or that there is wastage of public funds through the enforcement to file the instant suit.
of an invalid or unconstitutional law. A person suing as a taxpayer, however, must
show that the act complained of directly involves the illegal disbursement of public B. Validity of the Subject Resolutions
funds derived from taxation. In other words, for a taxpayer’s suit to prosper, two
requisites must be met namely, (1) public funds derived from taxation are disbursed Land Bank avers that the Subject Resolutions provided ample authority for Mayor
by a political subdivision or instrumentality and in doing so, a law is violated or Eriguel to contract the Subject Loans. It posits that Section 444(b)(1)(vi) of the LGC
some irregularity is committed; and (2) the petitioner is directly affected by the merely requires that the municipal mayor be authorized by the SB concerned and
alleged act.31 that such authorization need not be embodied in an ordinance. 38

Records reveal that the foregoing requisites are present in the instant case. A careful perusal of Section 444(b)(1)(vi) of the LGC shows that while the
authorization of the municipal mayor need not be in the form of an ordinance, the
First, although the construction of the APC would be primarily sourced from the obligation which the said local executive is authorized to enter into must be made
proceeds of the Subject Loans, which Land Bank insists are not taxpayer’s money, pursuant to a law or ordinance, viz:
there is no denying that public funds derived from taxation are bound to be
expended as the Municipality assigned a portion of its IRA as a security for the Sec. 444. The Chief Executive: Powers, Duties, Functions and Compensation. -
foregoing loans. Needless to state, the Municipality’s IRA, which serves as the local
government unit’s just share in the national taxes,32 is in the nature of public funds
derived from taxation. The Court believes, however, that although these funds may xxxx
TAXATION CASES |43

(b) For efficient, effective and economical governance the purpose of which is the held in Middletown Policemen's Benevolent Association v. Township of
general welfare of the municipality and its inhabitants pursuant to Section 16 of this Middletown:44
Code, the municipal mayor shall:
There is a distinction between an act utterly beyond the jurisdiction of a municipal
xxxx corporation and the irregular exercise of a basic power under the legislative grant in
matters not in themselves jurisdictional. The former are ultra vires in the primary
(vi) Upon authorization by the sangguniang bayan, represent the municipality in all sense and void; the latter, ultra vires only in a secondary sense which does not
its business transactions and sign on its behalf all bonds, contracts, and obligations, preclude ratification or the application of the doctrine of estoppel in the interest of
and such other documents made pursuant to law or ordinance; (Emphasis and equity and essential justice. (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
underscoring supplied)
In other words, an act which is outside of the municipality’s jurisdiction is
In the present case, while Mayor Eriguel’s authorization to contract the Subject considered as a void ultra vires act, while an act attended only by an irregularity but
Loans was not contained – as it need not be contained – in the form of an ordinance, remains within the municipality’s power is considered as an ultra vires act subject to
the said loans and even the Redevelopment Plan itself were not approved pursuant ratification and/or validation. To the former belongs municipal contracts which (a)
to any law or ordinance but through mere resolutions. The distinction between are entered into beyond the express, implied or inherent powers of the local
ordinances and resolutions is well-perceived. While ordinances are laws and possess government unit; and (b) do not comply with the substantive requirements of law
a general and permanent character, resolutions are merely declarations of the e.g., when expenditure of public funds is to be made, there must be an actual
sentiment or opinion of a lawmaking body on a specific matter and are temporary in appropriation and certificate of availability of funds; while to the latter belongs
nature.39 As opposed to ordinances, "no rights can be conferred by and be inferred those which (a) are entered into by the improper department, board, officer of
from a resolution."40 In this accord, it cannot be denied that the SB violated Section agent; and (b)do not comply with the formal requirements of a written contract e.g.,
444(b)(1)(vi) of the LGC altogether. the Statute of Frauds.45

Noticeably, the passage of the Subject Resolutions was also tainted with other Applying these principles to the case at bar, it is clear that the Subject Loans belong
irregularities, such as (1) the SB’s failure to submit the Subject Resolutions to the to the first class of ultra vires acts deemed as void.
Sangguniang Panlalawigan of La Union for its review contrary to Section 56 of the
LGC;41 and (2) the lack of publication and posting in contravention of Section 59 of Records disclose that the said loans were executed by the Municipality for the
the LGC.42 purpose of funding the conversion of the Agoo Plaza into a commercial center
pursuant to the Redevelopment Plan. However, the conversion of the said plaza is
In fine, Land Bank cannot rely on the Subject Resolutions as basis to validate the beyond the Municipality’s jurisdiction considering the property’s nature as one for
Subject Loans. public use and thereby, forming part of the public dominion. Accordingly, it cannot
be the object of appropriation either by the State or by private persons. 46 Nor can it
be the subject of lease or any other contractual undertaking. 47 In Villanueva v.
C. Ultra vires nature of the Subject Castanñ eda, Jr.,48 citing Espiritu v. Municipal Council of Pozorrubio,49 the Court
pronounced that:
Loans
x x x Town plazas are properties of public dominion, to be devoted to public use and
Neither can Land Bank claim that the Subject Loans do not constitute ultra vires acts to be made available to the public in general. They are outside the commerce of man
of the officers who approved the same. and cannot be disposed of or even leased by the municipality to private
parties.1âwphi1
Generally, an ultra vires act is one committed outside the object for which a
corporation is created as defined by the law of its organization and therefore beyond In this relation, Article 1409(1) of the Civil Code provides that a contract whose
the powers conferred upon it by law.43 There are two (2) types of ultra vires acts. As purpose is contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy is
TAXATION CASES |44

considered void50 and as such, creates no rights or obligations or any juridical The petitioner seeks the reversal of the Decision1 of the Court of Appeals of 31
relations.51 Consequently, given the unlawful purpose behind the Subject Loans January 2001 in CA-G.R. SP No. 57799 affirming the 3 January 2000 Decision2 of the
which is to fund the commercialization of the Agoo Plaza pursuant to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) in C.T.A. Case No. 5328,3 which held that the respondent
Redevelopment Plan, they are considered as ultra vires in the primary sense thus, Estate of Benigno P. Toda, Jr. is not liable for the deficiency income tax of Cibeles
rendering them void and in effect, non-binding on the Municipality. Insurance Corporation (CIC) in the amount of P79,099,999.22 for the year 1989, and
ordered the cancellation and setting aside of the assessment issued by
At this juncture, it is equally observed that the land on which the Agoo Plaza is Commissioner of Internal Revenue Liwayway Vinzons-Chato on 9 January 1995.
situated cannot be converted into patrimonial property – as the SB tried to when it
passed Municipal Ordinance No. 02-200752 – absent any express grant by the The case at bar stemmed from a Notice of Assessment sent to CIC by the
national government.53 As public land used for public use, the foregoing lot rightfully Commissioner of Internal Revenue for deficiency income tax arising from
belongs to and is subject to the administration and control of the Republic of the an alleged simulated sale of a 16-storey commercial building known as
Philippines.54 Hence, without the said grant, the Municipality has no right to claim it Cibeles Building, situated on two parcels of land on Ayala Avenue, Makati
as patrimonial property. City.

On 2 March 1989, CIC authorized Benigno P. Toda, Jr., President and owner
Nevertheless, while the Subject Loans cannot bind the Municipality for being ultra of 99.991% of its issued and outstanding capital stock, to sell the Cibeles
vires, the officers who authorized the passage of the Subject Resolutions are Building and the two parcels of land on which the building stands for an
personally liable. Case law states that public officials can be held personally amount of not less than P90 million.4
accountable for acts claimed to have been performed in connection with official
duties where they have acted ultra vires,55 as in this case. 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
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. Accordingly, the March 26, 2010 Decision of Royal Match Inc. (RMI) for P200 million. These two transactions were
the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV. No. 89732 is hereby AFFIRMED. evidenced by Deeds of Absolute Sale notarized on the same day by the
same notary public.5
SO ORDERED.
For the sale of the property to RMI, Altonaga paid capital gains tax in the
amount of P10 million.6
CIR vs. Estate f Toda
On 16 April 1990, CIC filed its corporate annual income tax return7 for the
G.R. No. 147188 September 14, 2004 year 1989, declaring, among other things, its gain from the sale of real
property in the amount of P75,728.021. After crediting withholding taxes
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner, of P254,497.00, it paid P26,341,2078 for its net taxable income of
vs. P75,987,725.
THE ESTATE OF BENIGNO P. TODA, JR., Represented by Special Co-administrators
Lorna Kapunan and Mario Luza Bautista, respondents. On 12 July 1990, Toda sold his entire shares of stocks in CIC to Le Hun T.
Choa for P12.5 million, as evidenced by a Deed of Sale of Shares of Stocks.9
DECISION Three and a half years later, or on 16 January 1994, Toda died.

DAVIDE, JR., C.J.: On 29 March 1994, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) sent an
This Court is called upon to determine in this case whether the tax planning scheme assessment notice10 and demand letter to the CIC for deficiency income
adopted by a corporation constitutes tax evasion that would justify an assessment of tax for the year 1989 in the amount of P79,099,999.22.
deficiency income tax.
The new CIC asked for a reconsideration, asserting that the assessment
should be directed against the old CIC, and not against the new CIC, which
TAXATION CASES |45

is owned by an entirely different set of stockholders; moreover, Toda had


undertaken to hold the buyer of his stockholdings and the CIC free from all On 15 February 1996, the Estate filed a petition for review15 with the CTA
tax liabilities for the fiscal years 1987-1989.11 alleging that the Commissioner erred in holding the Estate liable for
income tax deficiency; that the inference of fraud of the sale of the
On 27 January 1995, the Estate of Benigno P. Toda, Jr., represented by properties is unreasonable and unsupported; and that the right of the
special co-administrators Lorna Kapunan and Mario Luza Bautista, Commissioner to assess CIC had already prescribed.
received a Notice of Assessment12 dated 9 January 1995 from the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue for deficiency income tax for the year In his Answer16 and Amended Answer,17 the Commissioner argued that
1989 in the amount of P79,099,999.22, computed as follows: the two transactions actually constituted a single sale of the property by
Income Tax – 1989 CIC to RMI, and that Altonaga was neither the buyer of the property from
Net Income per return P75,987,725.00 CIC nor the seller of the same property to RMI. The additional gain of P100
million (the difference between the second simulated sale for P200 million
Add: Additional gain on sale of real property taxable under ordinary and the first simulated sale for P100 million) realized by CIC was taxed at
corporate income but were substituted with individual capital the rate of only 5% purportedly as capital gains tax of Altonaga, instead of
gains(P200M – 100M) at the rate of 35% as corporate income tax of CIC. The income tax return
100,000,000.00 filed by CIC for 1989 with intent to evade payment of the tax was thus false
Total Net Taxable Income per investigation P175,987,725.00 or fraudulent. Since such falsity or fraud was discovered by the BIR only on
Tax Due thereof at 35% P 61,595,703.75 8 March 1991, the assessment issued on 9 January 1995 was well within
Less: Payment already made the prescriptive period prescribed by Section 223 (a) of the National
1. Per return P26,595,704.00 Internal Revenue Code of 1986, which provides that tax may be assessed
2. Thru Capital Gains Tax made within ten years from the discovery of the falsity or fraud. With the sale
by R.A. Altonaga 10,000,000.00 36,595,704.00 Balance of tax due being tainted with fraud, the separate corporate personality of CIC should
be disregarded. Toda, being the registered owner of the 99.991% shares of
P 24,999,999.75 stock of CIC and the beneficial owner of the remaining 0.009% shares
Add: 50% Surcharge registered in the name of the individual directors of CIC, should be held
12,499,999.88 liable for the deficiency income tax, especially because the gains realized
25% Surcharge from the sale were withdrawn by him as cash advances or paid to him as
6,249,999.94 cash dividends. Since he is already dead, his estate shall answer for his
Total liability.
P 43,749,999.57
Add: Interest 20% from In its decision18 of 3 January 2000, the CTA held that the Commissioner
4/16/90-4/30/94 (.808) 35,349,999.65 failed to prove that CIC committed fraud to deprive the government of the
TOTAL AMT. DUE & COLLECTIBLE P 79,099,999.22 taxes due it. It ruled that even assuming that a pre-conceived scheme was
============== adopted by CIC, the same constituted mere tax avoidance, and not tax
evasion. There being no proof of fraudulent transaction, the applicable
The Estate thereafter filed a letter of protest.13 period for the BIR to assess CIC is that prescribed in Section 203 of the
NIRC of 1986, which is three years after the last day prescribed by law for
In the letter dated 19 October 1995,14 the Commissioner dismissed the the filing of the return. Thus, the government’s right to assess CIC
protest, stating that a fraudulent scheme was deliberately perpetuated by prescribed on 15 April 1993. The assessment issued on 9 January 1995
the CIC wholly owned and controlled by Toda by covering up the additional was, therefore, no longer valid. The CTA also ruled that the mere
gain of P100 million, which resulted in the change in the income structure ownership by Toda of 99.991% of the capital stock of CIC was not in itself
of the proceeds of the sale of the two parcels of land and the building sufficient ground for piercing the separate corporate personality of CIC.
thereon to an individual capital gains, thus evading the higher corporate Hence, the CTA declared that the Estate is not liable for deficiency income
income tax rate of 35%.
TAXATION CASES |46

tax of P79,099,999.22 and, accordingly, cancelled and set aside the 1989, CIC received P40 million from RMI, and not from Altonaga. The said
assessment issued by the Commissioner on 9 January 1995. amount was debited by RMI in its trial balance as of 30 June 1989 as
investment in Cibeles Building. The substantial portion of P40 million was
In its motion for reconsideration,19 the Commissioner insisted that the withdrawn by Toda through the declaration of cash dividends to all its
sale of the property owned by CIC was the result of the connivance stockholders.
between Toda and Altonaga. She further alleged that the latter was a
representative, dummy, and a close business associate of the former, having For its part, respondent Estate asserts that the Commissioner failed to
held his office in a property owned by CIC and derived his salary from a present the income tax return of Altonaga to prove that the latter is
foreign corporation (Aerobin, Inc.) duly owned by Toda for representation financially incapable of purchasing the Cibeles property.
services rendered. The CTA denied20 the motion for reconsideration,
prompting the Commissioner to file a petition for review21 with the Court To resolve the grounds raised by the Commissioner, the following
of Appeals. questions are pertinent:

In its challenged Decision of 31 January 2001, the Court of Appeals 1. Is this a case of tax evasion or tax avoidance?
affirmed the decision of the CTA, reasoning that the CTA, being more
advantageously situated and having the necessary expertise in matters of 2. Has the period for assessment of deficiency income tax for the year 1989
taxation, is "better situated to determine the correctness, propriety, and prescribed? and
legality of the income tax assessments assailed by the Toda Estate."22
3. Can respondent Estate be held liable for the deficiency income tax of CIC
Unsatisfied with the decision of the Court of Appeals, the Commissioner for the year 1989, if any?
filed the present petition invoking the following grounds:
We shall discuss these questions in seriatim.
I. THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT RESPONDENT
COMMITTED NO FRAUD WITH INTENT TO EVADE THE TAX ON THE SALE Is this a case of tax evasion or tax avoidance?
OF THE PROPERTIES OF CIBELES INSURANCE CORPORATION.
Tax avoidance and tax evasion are the two most common ways used by
II. THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN NOT DISREGARDING THE taxpayers in escaping from taxation. Tax avoidance is the tax saving device
SEPARATE CORPORATE PERSONALITY OF CIBELES INSURANCE within the means sanctioned by law. This method should be used by the
CORPORATION. taxpayer in good faith and at arms length. Tax evasion, on the other hand, is
a scheme used outside of those lawful means and when availed of, it
III. THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE RIGHT OF usually subjects the taxpayer to further or additional civil or criminal
PETITIONER TO ASSESS RESPONDENT FOR DEFICIENCY INCOME TAX liabilities.23
FOR THE YEAR 1989 HAD PRESCRIBED.
Tax evasion connotes the integration of three factors: (1) the end to be
The Commissioner reiterates her arguments in her previous pleadings and achieved, i.e., the payment of less than that known by the taxpayer to be
insists that the sale by CIC of the Cibeles property was in connivance with legally due, or the non-payment of tax when it is shown that a tax is due;
its dummy Rafael Altonaga, who was financially incapable of purchasing it. (2) an accompanying state of mind which is described as being "evil," in
She further points out that the documents themselves prove the fact of "bad faith," "willfull," or "deliberate and not accidental"; and (3) a course of
fraud in that (1) the two sales were done simultaneously on the same date, action or failure of action which is unlawful.24
30 August 1989; (2) the Deed of Absolute Sale between Altonaga and RMI
was notarized ahead of the alleged sale between CIC and Altonaga, with the All these factors are present in the instant case. It is significant to note that
former registered in the Notarial Register of Jocelyn H. Arreza Pabelana as as early as 4 May 1989, prior to the purported sale of the Cibeles property
Doc. 91, Page 20, Book I, Series of 1989; and the latter, as Doc. No. 92, Page by CIC to Altonaga on 30 August 1989, CIC received P40 million from
20, Book I, Series of 1989, of the same Notary Public; (3) as early as 4 May RMI,25 and not from Altonaga. That P40 million was debited by RMI and
TAXATION CASES |47

reflected in its trial balance26 as "other inv. – Cibeles Bldg." Also, as of 31 would then subject the income to only 5% individual capital gains tax, and
July 1989, another P40 million was debited and reflected in RMI’s trial not the 35% corporate income tax. Altonaga’s sole purpose of acquiring
balance as "other inv. – Cibeles Bldg." This would show that the real buyer and transferring title of the subject properties on the same day was to
of the properties was RMI, and not the intermediary Altonaga.lavvphi1.net create a tax shelter. Altonaga never controlled the property and did not
enjoy the normal benefits and burdens of ownership. The sale to him was
The investigation conducted by the BIR disclosed that Altonaga was a close merely a tax ploy, a sham, and without business purpose and economic
business associate and one of the many trusted corporate executives of substance. Doubtless, the execution of the two sales was calculated to
Toda. This information was revealed by Mr. Boy Prieto, the assistant mislead the BIR with the end in view of reducing the consequent income
accountant of CIC and an old timer in the company.27 But Mr. Prieto did tax liability.lavvphi1.net
not testify on this matter, hence, that information remains to be hearsay
and is thus inadmissible in evidence. It was not verified either, since the In a nutshell, the intermediary transaction, i.e., the sale of Altonaga, which
letter-request for investigation of Altonaga was unserved,28 Altonaga was prompted more on the mitigation of tax liabilities than for legitimate
having left for the United States of America in January 1990. Nevertheless, business purposes constitutes one of tax evasion.31
that Altonaga was a mere conduit finds support in the admission of
respondent Estate that the sale to him was part of the tax planning scheme Generally, a sale or exchange of assets will have an income tax incidence
of CIC. That admission is borne by the records. In its Memorandum, only when it is consummated.32 The incidence of taxation depends upon
respondent Estate declared: the substance of a transaction. The tax consequences arising from gains
from a sale of property are not finally to be determined solely by the means
Petitioner, however, claims there was a "change of structure" of the employed to transfer legal title. Rather, the transaction must be viewed as a
proceeds of sale. Admitted one hundred percent. But isn’t this precisely the whole, and each step from the commencement of negotiations to the
definition of tax planning? Change the structure of the funds and pay a consummation of the sale is relevant. A sale by one person cannot be
lower tax. Precisely, Sec. 40 (2) of the Tax Code exists, allowing tax free transformed for tax purposes into a sale by another by using the latter as a
transfers of property for stock, changing the structure of the property and conduit through which to pass title. To permit the true nature of the
the tax to be paid. As long as it is done legally, changing the structure of a transaction to be disguised by mere formalisms, which exist solely to alter
transaction to achieve a lower tax is not against the law. It is absolutely tax liabilities, would seriously impair the effective administration of the tax
allowed. policies of Congress.33

Tax planning is by definition to reduce, if not eliminate altogether, a tax. To allow a taxpayer to deny tax liability on the ground that the sale was
Surely petitioner [sic] cannot be faulted for wanting to reduce the tax from made through another and distinct entity when it is proved that the latter
35% to 5%.29 [Underscoring supplied]. was merely a conduit is to sanction a circumvention of our tax laws. Hence,
the sale to Altonaga should be disregarded for income tax purposes.34 The
The scheme resorted to by CIC in making it appear that there were two two sale transactions should be treated as a single direct sale by CIC to
sales of the subject properties, i.e., from CIC to Altonaga, and then from RMI.
Altonaga to RMI cannot be considered a legitimate tax planning. Such
scheme is tainted with fraud. Accordingly, the tax liability of CIC is governed by then Section 24 of the
NIRC of 1986, as amended (now 27 (A) of the Tax Reform Act of 1997),
Fraud in its general sense, "is deemed to comprise anything calculated to which stated as follows:
deceive, including all acts, omissions, and concealment involving a breach
of legal or equitable duty, trust or confidence justly reposed, resulting in Sec. 24. Rates of tax on corporations. – (a) Tax on domestic corporations.- A
the damage to another, or by which an undue and unconscionable tax is hereby imposed upon the taxable net income received during each
advantage is taken of another."30 taxable year from all sources by every corporation organized in, or existing
under the laws of the Philippines, and partnerships, no matter how created
Here, it is obvious that the objective of the sale to Altonaga was to reduce or organized but not including general professional partnerships, in
the amount of tax to be paid especially that the transfer from him to RMI accordance with the following:
TAXATION CASES |48

Twenty-five percent upon the amount by which the taxable net income As stated above, the prescriptive period to assess the correct taxes in case
does not exceed one hundred thousand pesos; and of false returns is ten years from the discovery of the falsity. The false
return was filed on 15 April 1990, and the falsity thereof was claimed to
Thirty-five percent upon the amount by which the taxable net income have been discovered only on 8 March 1991.37 The assessment for the
exceeds one hundred thousand pesos. 1989 deficiency income tax of CIC was issued on 9 January 1995. Clearly,
the issuance of the correct assessment for deficiency income tax was well
CIC is therefore liable to pay a 35% corporate tax for its taxable net income within the prescriptive period.
in 1989. The 5% individual capital gains tax provided for in Section 34 (h)
of the NIRC of 198635 (now 6% under Section 24 (D) (1) of the Tax Reform Is respondent Estate liable for the 1989 deficiency income tax of Cibeles
Act of 1997) is inapplicable. Hence, the assessment for the deficiency Insurance Corporation?
income tax issued by the BIR must be upheld.
A corporation has a juridical personality distinct and separate from the
Has the period of assessment prescribed? persons owning or composing it. Thus, the owners or stockholders of a
corporation may not generally be made to answer for the liabilities of a
No. Section 269 of the NIRC of 1986 (now Section 222 of the Tax Reform corporation and vice versa. There are, however, certain instances in which
Act of 1997) read: personal liability may arise. It has been held in a number of cases that
personal liability of a corporate director, trustee, or officer along, albeit not
Sec. 269. Exceptions as to period of limitation of assessment and collection necessarily, with the corporation may validly attach when:
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 1. He assents to the (a) patently unlawful act of the corporation, (b) bad
court after the collection of such tax may be begun without assessment, at faith or gross negligence in directing its affairs, or (c) conflict of interest,
any time within ten years after the discovery of the falsity, fraud or resulting in damages to the corporation, its stockholders, or other persons;
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 2. He consents to the issuance of watered down stocks or, having
civil or criminal action for collection thereof… . knowledge thereof, does not forthwith file with the corporate secretary his
written objection thereto;
Put differently, in cases of (1) fraudulent returns; (2) false returns with
intent to evade tax; and (3) failure to file a return, the period within which 3. He agrees to hold himself personally and solidarily liable with the
to assess tax is ten years from discovery of the fraud, falsification or corporation; or
omission, as the case may be.
4. He is made, by specific provision of law, to personally answer for his
It is true that in a query dated 24 August 1989, Altonaga, through his corporate action.38
counsel, asked the Opinion of the BIR on the tax consequence of the two
sale transactions.36 Thus, the BIR was amply informed of the transactions It is worth noting that when the late Toda sold his shares of stock to Le Hun
even prior to the execution of the necessary documents to effect the T. Choa, he knowingly and voluntarily held himself personally liable for all
transfer. Subsequently, the two sales were openly made with the execution the tax liabilities of CIC and the buyer for the years 1987, 1988, and 1989.
of public documents and the declaration of taxes for 1989. However, these Paragraph g of the Deed of Sale of Shares of Stocks specifically provides:
circumstances do not negate the existence of fraud. As earlier discussed
those two transactions were tainted with fraud. And even assuming g. Except for transactions occurring in the ordinary course of business,
arguendo that there was no fraud, we find that the income tax return filed Cibeles has no liabilities or obligations, contingent or otherwise, for taxes,
by CIC for the year 1989 was false. It did not reflect the true or actual sums of money or insurance claims other than those reported in its audited
amount gained from the sale of the Cibeles property. Obviously, such was financial statement as of December 31, 1989, attached hereto as "Annex B"
done with intent to evade or reduce tax liability. and made a part hereof. The business of Cibeles has at all times been
TAXATION CASES |49

conducted in full compliance with all applicable laws, rules and Before the Court are consolidated petitions for review on certiorari:1
regulations. SELLER undertakes and agrees to hold the BUYER and Cibeles
free from any and all income tax liabilities of Cibeles for the fiscal years 1. G.R. No. 196596 filed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
1987, 1988 and 1989.39 [Underscoring Supplied]. (Commissioner) to assail the December 10, 2010 decision and March 29,
2011 resolution of the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) in En Banc Case No.
When the late Toda undertook and agreed "to hold the BUYER and Cibeles 622;2
free from any all income tax liabilities of Cibeles for the fiscal years 1987,
1988, and 1989," he thereby voluntarily held himself personally liable
therefor. Respondent estate cannot, therefore, deny liability for CIC’s 2. G.R. No. 198841 filed by De La Salle University, Inc. (DLSU) to assail the
deficiency income tax for the year 1989 by invoking the separate corporate June 8, 2011 decision and October 4, 2011 resolution in CTA En Banc Case
personality of CIC, since its obligation arose from Toda’s contractual No. 671;3 and
undertaking, as contained in the Deed of Sale of Shares of Stock.
3. G.R. No. 198941 filed by the Commissioner to assail the June 8, 2011
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the petition is hereby GRANTED. decision and October 4, 2011 resolution in CTA En Banc Case No. 671.4
The decision of the Court of Appeals of 31 January 2001 in CA-G.R. SP No. G.R. Nos. 196596, 198841 and 198941 all originated from CTA Special First Division
57799 is REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and another one is hereby rendered (CTA Division) Case No. 7303. G.R. No. 196596 stemmed from CTA En BancCase No.
ordering respondent Estate of Benigno P. Toda Jr. to pay P79,099,999.22 as 622 filed by the Commissioner to challenge CTA Case No. 7303. G.R. No. 198841 and
deficiency income tax of Cibeles Insurance Corporation for the year 1989, 198941 both stemmed from CTA En Banc Case No. 671 filed by DLSU to also
plus legal interest from 1 May 1994 until the amount is fully paid. challenge CTA Case No. 7303.chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
The Factual Antecedents
Costs against respondent.
Sometime in 2004, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) issued to DLSU Letter of
SO ORDERED. Authority (LOA) No. 2794 authorizing its revenue officers to examine the latter's
books of accounts and other accounting records for all internal revenue taxes for the
G.R. No. 196596, November 09, 2016 period Fiscal Year Ending 2003 and Unverified Prior Years.5

On May 19, 2004, BIR issued a Preliminary Assessment Notice to DLSU.6


COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Petitioner, v. DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY,
INC., Respondent. Subsequently on August 18, 2004, the BIR through a Formal Letter of
Demand assessed DLSU the following deficiency taxes: (1) income tax on rental
G.R. No. 198841 earnings from restaurants/canteens and bookstores operating within the campus;
(2) value-added tax (VAT) on business income; and (3) documentary stamp tax (DST)
DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY INC., Petitioner, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL on loans and lease contracts. The BIR demanded the payment of P17,303,001.12,
REVENUE,Respondent. inclusive of surcharge, interest and penalty for taxable years 2001, 2002 and
2003.7
G.R. No. 198941
DLSU protested the assessment. The Commissioner failed to act on the protest; thus,
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Petitioner, v. DE LA SALLE UNIVERSITY, DLSU filed on August 3, 2005 a petition for review with the CTA Division. 8
INC., Respondent.
DLSU, a non-stock, non-profit educational institution, principally anchored its petition
DECISION on Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the Constitution, which reads:
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary
BRION, J.: (3) All revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions used
TAXATION CASES |50

actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes shall be exempt from interest on the...basic deficiency taxes...until full payment thereof pursuant to
taxes and duties. xxx. Section 249(B) of the [National Internal Revenue Code]...xxx.

On January 5, 2010, the CTA Division partially granted DLSU's petition for review. Further, [DLSU] is hereby held liable to pay 20% per annum delinquency interest on
The dispositive portion of the decision reads: the deficiency taxes, surcharge and deficiency interest which have accrued...from
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary September 30, 2004 until fully paid.15ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Review is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The DST Consequently, the Commissioner supplemented its petition with the CTA En
assessment on the loan transactions of [DLSU] in the amount of P1,1681,774.00 is Banc and argued that the CTA Division erred in admitting DLSU's additional
hereby CANCELLED. However, [DLSU] is ORDERED TO PAY deficiency income tax, evidence.16
VAT and DST on its lease contracts, plus 25% surcharge for the fiscal years 2001,
2002 and 2003 in the total amount of P18,421,363.53...xxx. Dissatisfied with the partial reduction of its tax liabilities, DLSU filed
a separate petition for review with the CTA En Banc (CTA En Banc Case No. 671) on
In addition, [DLSU] is hereby held liable to pay 20% delinquency interest on the the following grounds: (1) the entire assessment should have been cancelled
total amount due computed from September 30, 2004 until full payment thereof because it was based on an invalid LOA; (2) assuming the LOA was valid, the CTA
pursuant to Section 249(C)(3) of the [National Internal Revenue Code]. Further, the Division should still have cancelled the entire assessment because DLSU submitted
compromise penalties imposed by [the Commissioner] were excluded, there. being evidence similar to those submitted by Ateneo De Manila University (Ateneo) in
no compromise agreement between the parties. a separate case where the CTA cancelled Ateneo's tax assessment; 17 and (3) the CTA
Division erred in finding that a portion of DLSU's rental income was not proved to
SO ORDERED.9ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary have been used actually, directly and exclusively for educational
Both the Commissioner and DLSU moved for the reconsideration of the January 5, purposes.18chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
2010 decision.10 On April 6, 2010, the CTA Division denied the Commissioner's The CTA En Banc Rulings
motion for reconsideration while it held in abeyance the resolution on DLSU's
motion for reconsideration.11 CTA En Banc Case No. 622

On May 13, 2010, the Commissioner appealed to the CTA En Banc (CTA En Banc Case The CTA En Banc dismissed the Commissioner's petition for review and sustained
No. 622) arguing that DLSU's use of its revenues and assets for non-educational or the findings of the CTA Division.19
commercial purposes removed these items from the exemption coverage under the
Constitution.12 Tax on rental income

On May 18, 2010, DLSU formally offered to the CTA Division supplemental pieces of Relying on the findings of the court-commissioned Independent Certified Public
documentary evidence to prove that its rental income was used actually, directly and Accountant (Independent CPA), the CTA En Banc found that DLSU was able to prove
exclusively for educational purposes.13The Commissioner did not promptly object to that a portion of the assessed rental income was used actually, directly and
the formal offer of supplemental evidence despite notice. 14 exclusively for educational purposes; hence, exempt from tax. 20 The CTA En
Banc was satisfied with DLSU's supporting evidence confirming that part of its
On July 29, 2010, the CTA Division, in view of the supplemental evidence submitted, rental income had indeed been used to pay the loan it obtained to build the
reduced the amount of DLSU's tax deficiencies. The dispositive portion of university's Physical Education - Sports Complex.21
the amended decision reads:
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary Parenthetically, DLSU's unsubstantiated claim for exemption, i.e., the part of its
WHEREFORE, [DLSU]'s Motion for Partial Reconsideration is hereby PARTIALLY income that was not shown by supporting documents to have been actually, directly
GRANTED. [DLSU] is hereby ORDERED TO PAY for deficiency income tax, VAT and and exclusively used for educational purposes, must be subjected to income tax and
DST plus 25% surcharge for the fiscal years 2001, 2002 and 2003 in the total VAT.22
adjusted amount of P5,506,456.71...xxx.
DST on loan and mortgage transactions
In addition, [DLSU] is hereby held liable to pay 20% per annum deficiency
TAXATION CASES |51

Contrary to the Commissioner's contention, DLSU proved its remittance of the DST and defenses.33
due on its loan and mortgage documents.23 The CTA En Banc found that DLSU's DST
payments had been remitted to the BIR, evidenced by the stamp on the documents On the CTA Division's appreciation of the evidence
made by a DST imprinting machine, which is allowed under Section 200 (D) of the
National Internal Revenue Code (Tax Code)24 and Section 2 of Revenue Regulations The CTA En Banc affirmed the CTA Division's appreciation of DLSU's evidence. It
(RR) No. 15-2001.25cralawred held that while DLSU successfully proved that a portion of its rental income was
transmitted and used to pay the loan obtained to fund the construction of the Sports
Admissibility of DLSU's supplemental evidence Complex, the rental income from other sources were not shown to have been
actually, directly and exclusively used for educational purposes. 34
The CTA En Banc held that the supplemental pieces of documentary evidence were
admissible even if DLSU formally offered them only when it moved for Not pleased with the CTA En Banc's ruling, both DLSU (G.R. No. 198841) and the
reconsideration of the CTA Division's original decision. Notably, the law creating the Commissioner (G.R. No. 198941) came to this Court for
CTA provides that proceedings before it shall not be governed strictly by the relief.chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
technical rules of evidence.26 The Consolidated Petitions

The Commissioner moved but failed to obtain a reconsideration of the CTA En Banc's G.R. No. 196596
December 10, 2010 decision.27 Thus, she came to this court for relief through a
petition for review on certiorari (G.R. No. 196596). The Commissioner submits the following arguments:

CTA En Banc Case No. 671 First, DLSU's rental income is taxable regardless of how such income is derived, used
or disposed of.35 DLSU's operations of canteens and bookstores within its campus
The CTA En Banc partially granted DLSU's petition for review and further reduced its even though exclusively serving the university community do not negate income tax
tax liabilities to P2,554,825.47 inclusive of surcharge.28 liability.36

On the validity of the Letter of Authority The Commissioner contends that Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the Constitution must
be harmonized with Section 30 (H) of the Tax Code, which states among others, that
The issue of the LOA's validity was raised during trial; 29 hence, the issue was deemed the income of whatever kind and character of [a non-stock and non-profit
properly submitted for decision and reviewable on appeal. educational institution] from any of [its] properties, real or personal, or from any of
(its] activities conducted for profit regardless of the disposition made of such income,
Citing jurisprudence, the CTA En Banc held that a LOA should cover only one taxable shall be subject to tax imposed by this Code. 37
period and that the practice of issuing a LOA covering audit of unverified prior
years is prohibited.30 The prohibition is consistent with Revenue Memorandum The Commissioner argues that the CTA En Banc misread and misapplied the case
Order (RMO) No. 43-90, which provides that if the audit includes more than one of Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. YMCA 38 to support its conclusion that
taxable period, the other periods or years shall be specifically indicated in the LOA. 31 revenues however generated are covered by the constitutional exemption, provided
that, the revenues will be used for educational purposes or will be held in reserve
In the present case, the LOA issued to DLSU is for Fiscal Year Ending 2003 and for such purposes.39
Unverified Prior Years. Hence, the assessments for deficiency income tax, VAT and
DST for taxable years 2001 and 2002 are void, but the assessment for taxable On the contrary, the Commissioner posits that a tax-exempt organization like DLSU
year 2003 is valid.32 is exempt only from property tax but not from income tax on the rentals earned
from property.40 Thus, DLSU's income from the leases of its real properties is not
On the applicability of the Ateneo case exempt from taxation even if the income would be used for educational purposes. 41

The CTA En Banc held that the Ateneo case is not a valid precedent because it Second, the Commissioner insists that DLSU did not prove the fact of DST
involved different parties, factual settings, bases of assessments, sets of evidence, payment42 and that it is not qualified to use the On-Line Electronic DST Imprinting
TAXATION CASES |52

Machine, which is available only to certain classes of taxpayers under RR No. 9-


2000.43 DLSU's Comment on G.R. No. 196596

Finally, the Commissioner objects to the admission of DLSU's supplemental offer of First, DLSU questions the defective verification attached to the petition. 52
evidence. The belated submission of supplemental evidence reopened the case for
trial, and worse, DLSU offered the supplemental evidence only after it received the Second, DLSU stresses that Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the Constitution is clear
unfavorable CTA Division's original decision.44 In any case, DLSU's submission of that all assets and revenues of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions used
supplemental documentary evidence was unnecessary since its rental income was actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes are exempt from taxes and
taxable regardless of its disposition.45 duties.53

G.R. No. 198841 On this point, DLSU explains that: (1) the tax exemption of non�stock, non-profit
educational institutions is novel to the 1987 Constitution and that Section 30 (H) of
DLSU argues as that: the 1997 Tax Code cannot amend the 1987 Constitution;54 (2) Section 30 of the
1997 Tax Code is almost an exact replica of Section 26 of the 1977 Tax Code - with
First, RMO No. 43-90 prohibits the practice of issuing a LOA with any indication the addition of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions to the list of tax-
of unverified prior years. A LOA issued contrary to RMO No. 43-90 is void, thus, an exempt entities; and (3) that the 1977 Tax Code was promulgated when the 1973
assessment issued based on such defective LOA must also be void. 46 Constitution was still in place.

DLSU points out that the LOA issued to it covered the Fiscal Year Ending 2003 and DLSU elaborates that the tax exemption granted to a private educational institution
Unverified Prior Years. On the basis of this defective LOA, the Commissioner assessed under the 1973 Constitution was only for real property tax. Back then, the special tax
DLSU for deficiency income tax, VAT and DST for taxable years 2001, 2002 and treatment on income of private educational institutions only emanates from
2003.47 DLSU objects to the CTA En Banc's conclusion that the LOA is valid for statute, i.e., the 1977 Tax Code. Only under the 1987 Constitution that exemption
taxable year 2003. According to DLSU, when RMO No. 43-90 provides that: from tax of all the assets and revenues of non-stock, non-profit educational
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary institutions used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes, was
The practice of issuing [LOAs] covering audit of 'unverified prior years' is hereby expressly and categorically enshrined.55
prohibited.ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
it refers to the LOA which has the format "Base Year + Unverified Prior Years." Since DLSU thus invokes the doctrine of constitutional supremacy, which renders any
the LOA issued to DLSU follows this format, then any assessment arising from it subsequent law that is contrary to the Constitution void and without any force and
must be entirely voided.48 effect.56 Section 30 (H) of the 1997 Tax Code insofar as it subjects to tax the income
of whatever kind and character of a non�stock and non-profit educational
Second, DLSU invokes the principle of uniformity in taxation, which mandates that institution from any of its properties, real or personal, or from any of its activities
for similarly situated parties, the same set of evidence should be appreciated and conducted for profit regardless of the disposition made of such income, should be
weighed in the same manner.49 The CTA En Banc erred when it did not similarly declared without force and effect in view of the constitutionally granted tax
appreciate DLSU's evidence as it did to the pieces of evidence submitted by Ateneo, exemption on "all revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational
also a non-stock, non-profit educational institution. 50 institutions used actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes." 57

G.R. No. 198941 DLSU further submits that it complies with the requirements enunciated in
the YMCA case, that for an exemption to be granted under Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of
The issues and arguments raised by the Commissioner in G.R. No. 198941 petition the Constitution, the taxpayer must prove that: (1) it falls under the classification
are exactly the same as those she raised in her: (1) petition docketed as G.R. No. non-stock, non-profit educational institution; and (2) the income it seeks to be
196596 and (2) comment on DLSU's petition docketed as G.R. No. exempted from taxation is used actually, directly and exclusively for educational
198841.51chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary purposes.58 Unlike YMCA, which is not an educational institution, DLSU is
Counter-arguments undisputedly a non-stock, non-profit educational institution. It had also submitted
evidence to prove that it actually, directly and exclusively used its income for
TAXATION CASES |53

educational purposes.59 II. Whether the entire assessment should be voided because of the defective
LOA;chanrobleslaw
DLSU also cites the deliberations of the 1986 Constitutional Commission where they
recognized that the tax exemption was granted "to incentivize private educational III. Whether the CTA correctly admitted DLSU's supplemental pieces of
institutions to share with the State the responsibility of educating the youth." 60 evidence; and
Third, DLSU highlights that both the CTA En Banc and Division found that the bank
that handled DLSU's loan and mortgage transactions had remitted to the BIR the IV. Whether the CTA's appreciation of the sufficiency ofDLSU's evidence may
DST through an imprinting machine, a method allowed under RR No. 15-2001. 61 In be disturbed by the Court.
any case, DLSU argues that it cannot be held liable for DST owmg to the exemption Our Ruling
granted under the Constitution.62
As we explain in full below, we rule that:
Finally, DLSU underscores that the Commissioner, despite notice, did not oppose the
formal offer of supplemental evidence. Because of the Commissioner's failure to I. The income, revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational
timely object, she became bound by the results of the submission of such institutions proved to have been used actually, directly and exclusively for
supplemental evidence.63 educational purposes are exempt from duties and taxes.

The CIR's Comment on G.R. No. 198841 II. The LOA issued to DLSU is not entirely void. The assessment for taxable
year 2003 is valid.
The Commissioner submits that DLSU is estopped from questioning the LOA's
validity because it failed to raise this issue in both the administrative and judicial
proceedings.64 That it was asked on cross�examination during the trial does not III. The CTA correctly admitted DLSU's formal offer of supplemental evidence;
make it an issue that the CTA could resolve.65 The Commissioner also maintains that and
DLSU's rental income is not tax-exempt because an educational institution is only
exempt from property tax but not from tax on the income earned from the IV. The CTA's appreciation of evidence is conclusive unless the CTA is shown to
property.66 have manifestly overlooked certain relevant facts not disputed by the
parties and which, if properly considered, would justify a different
DLSU's Comment on G.R. No. 198941 conclusion.

DLSU puts forward the same counter-arguments discussed above. 67 The parties failed to convince the Court that the CTA overlooked or failed
to consider relevant facts. We thus sustain the CTA En Banc's findings that:
In addition, DLSU prays that the Court award attorney's fees in its favor because it
was constrained to unnecessarily retain the services of counsel in this separate a. DLSU proved that a portion of its rental income was used actually,
petition.68chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary directly and exclusively for educational purposes; and
Issues
b. DLSU proved the payment of the DST through its bank's on-line
Although the parties raised a number of issues, the Court shall decide only the
imprinting machine.
pivotal issues, which we summarize as follows:
I. The revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions
proved to have been used actually, directly, and exclusively for educational
I. Whether DLSU's income and revenues proved to have been used actually, purposes are exempt from duties and taxes.
directly and exclusively for educational purposes are exempt from duties
and taxes;chanrobleslaw DLSU rests it case on Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the 1987 Constitution, which reads:
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary
TAXATION CASES |54

(3) All revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions used
actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes shall be exempt Notwithstanding the provisions in the preceding paragraphs, the income of
from taxes and duties. Upon the dissolution or cessation of the corporate whatever kind and character of the foregoing organizations from any of their
existence of such institutions, their assets shall be disposed of in the manner properties, real or personal, or from any of their activities conducted for
provided by law. Proprietary educational institutions, including those profit regardless of the disposition made of such income shall be subject to tax
cooperatively owned, may likewise be entitled to such exemptions subject imposed under this Code. [underscoring and emphasis
to the limitations provided by law including restrictions on dividends and supplied]ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
provisions for reinvestment [underscoring and emphasis supplied] The Commissioner posits that the 1997 Tax Code qualified the tax exemption
granted to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions such that the revenues and
Before fully discussing the merits of the case, we observe that: income they derived from their assets, or from any of their activities conducted for
profit, are taxable even if these revenues and income are used for educational
First, the constitutional provision refers to two kinds of educational institutions: (1) purposes.
non-stock, non-profit educational institutions and (2) proprietary educational
institutions.69 Did the 1997 Tax Code qualifY the tax exemption constitutionally-granted to non-
stock, non-profit educational institutions?
Second, DLSU falls under the first category. Even the Commissioner admits the status
of DLSU as a non-stock, non-profit educational institution. 70 We answer in the negative.

Third, while DLSU's claim for tax exemption arises from and is based on the While the present petition appears to be a case of first impression, 71 the Court in
Constitution, the Constitution, in the same provision, also imposes certain the YMCA case had in fact already analyzed and explained the meaning of Article XIV,
conditions to avail of the exemption. We discuss below the import of the Section 4 (3) of the Constitution. The Court in that case made doctrinal
constitutional text vis-a-vis the Commissioner's counter-arguments. pronouncements that are relevant to the present case.

Fourth, there is a marked distinction between the treatment of non�stock, non- The issue in YMCA was whether the income derived from rentals of real property
profit educational institutions and proprietary educational institutions. The tax owned by the YMCA, established as a "welfare, educational and charitable non-profit
exemption granted to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions is conditioned corporation," was subject to income tax under the Tax Code and the Constitution. 72
only on the actual, direct and exclusive use of their revenues and assets for
educational purposes. While tax exemptions may also be granted to proprietary The Court denied YMCA's claim for exemption on the ground that as a charitable
educational institutions, these exemptions may be subject to limitations imposed by institution falling under Article VI, Section 28 (3) of the Constitution,73 the YMCA is
Congress. not tax-exempt per se; "what is exempted is not the institution itself...those
exempted from real estate taxes are lands, buildings and improvements actually,
As we explain below, the marked distinction between a non-stock, non-profit and a directly and exclusively used for religious, charitable or educational purposes." 74
proprietary educational institution is crucial in determining the nature and extent of
the tax exemption granted to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions. The Court held that the exemption claimed by the YMCA is expressly disallowed by
the last paragraph of then Section 27 (now Section 30) of the Tax Code, which
The Commissioner opposes DLSU's claim for tax exemption on the basis of Section mandates that the income of exempt organizations from any of their properties, real
30 (H) of the Tax Code. The relevant text reads: or personal, are subject to the same tax imposed by the Tax Code, regardless of how
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary that income is used. The Court ruled that the last paragraph of Section 27
The following organizations shall not be taxed under this Title [Tax on Income] in unequivocally subjects to tax the rent income of the YMCA from its property. 75
respect to income received by them as such:
xxxx In short, the YMCA is exempt only from property tax but not from income tax.

(H) A non-stock and non-profit educational institution As a last ditch effort to avoid paying the taxes on its rental income, the YMCA
xxxx invoked the tax privilege granted under Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the Constitution.
TAXATION CASES |55

beneficial to students who may otherwise be charged unreasonable tuition fees if


The Court denied YMCA's claim that it falls under Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the not for the tax exemption extended to all revenues and assets of non-stock, non-
Constitution holding that the term educational institution, when used in laws profit educational institutions.80
granting tax exemptions, refers to the school system (synonymous with formal
education); it includes a college or an educational establishment; it refers to the Further, a plain reading of the Constitution would show that Article XIV, Section 4 (3)
hierarchically structured and chronologically graded learnings organized and does not require that the revenues and income must have also been sourced from
provided by the formal school system.76 educational activities or activities related to the purposes of an educational
institution. The phrase all revenues is unqualified by any reference to the source of
The Court then significantly laid down the requisites for availing the tax exemption revenues. Thus, so long as the revenues and income are used actually, directly and
under Article XIV, Section 4 (3), namely: (1) the taxpayer falls under the exclusively for educational purposes, then said revenues and income shall be exempt
classification non-stock, non-profit educational institution; and (2) the income it from taxes and duties.81
seeks to be exempted from taxation is used actually, directly and exclusively for
educational purposes.77 We find it helpful to discuss at this point the taxation of revenues versus the taxation
of assets.
We now adopt YMCA as precedent and hold that:
Revenues consist of the amounts earned by a person or entity from the conduct of
1. The last paragraph of Section 30 of the Tax Code is without force and effect business operations.82 It may refer to the sale of goods, rendition of services, or the
with respect to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions, provided, return of an investment. Revenue is a component of the tax base in income
that the non-stock, non-profit educational institutions prove that its assets tax,83 VAT,84 and local business tax (LBT).85
and revenues are used actually, directly and exclusively for educational
purposes. Assets, on the other hand, are the tangible and intangible properties owned by a
person or entity.86 It may refer to real estate, cash deposit in a bank, investment in
the stocks of a corporation, inventory of goods, or any property from which the
2. The tax-exemption constitutionally-granted to non-stock, non� profit person or entity may derive income or use to generate the same. In Philippine
educational institutions, is not subject to limitations imposed by law. taxation, the fair market value of real property is a component of the tax base in real
The tax exemption granted by the Constitution to non-stock, non-profit property tax (RPT).87 Also, the landed cost of imported goods is a component of the
educational institutions is conditioned only on the actual, direct and exclusive tax base in VAT on importation88 and tariff duties.89
use of their assets, revenues and income78for educational purposes.
Thus, when a non-stock, non-profit educational institution proves that it uses
We find that unlike Article VI, Section 28 (3) of the Constitution (pertaining to its revenues actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes, it shall be
charitable institutions, churches, parsonages or convents, mosques, and non-profit exempted from income tax, VAT, and LBT. On the other hand, when it also shows that
cemeteries), which exempts from tax only the assets, i.e., "all lands, buildings, and it uses its assets in the form of real property for educational purposes, it shall be
improvements, actually, directly, and exclusively used for religious, charitable, or exempted from RPT.
educational purposes...," Article XIV, Section 4 (3) categorically states that
"[a]ll revenues and assets... used actually, directly, and exclusively for educational To be clear, proving the actual use of the taxable item will result in an exemption, but
purposes shall be exempt from taxes and duties." the specific tax from which the entity shall be exempted from shall depend on
whether the item is an item of revenue or asset.
The addition and express use of the word revenues in Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the
Constitution is not without significance. To illustrate, if a university leases a portion of its school building to a bookstore or
cafeteria, the leased portion is not actually, directly and exclusively used for
We find that the text demonstrates the policy of the 1987 Constitution, discernible educational purposes, even if the bookstore or canteen caters only to university
from the records of the 1986 Constitutional Commission 79 to provide broader tax students, faculty and staff.
privilege to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions as recognition of their role
in assisting the State provide a public good. The tax exemption was seen as The leased portion of the building may be subject to real property tax, as held
TAXATION CASES |56

in Abra Valley College, Inc. v. Aquino.90 We ruled in that case that the test of proprietary counterparts.
exemption from taxation is the use of the property for purposes mentioned in the
Constitution. We also held that the exemption extends to facilities which are While a non-stock, non-profit educational institution is classified as a tax-exempt
incidental to and reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the main entity under Section 30 (Exemptions from Tax on Corporations) of the Tax Code, a
purposes. proprietary educational institution is covered by Section 27 (Rates of Income Tax on
Domestic Corporations).
In concrete terms, the lease of a portion of a school building for commercial
purposes, removes such asset from the property tax exemption granted under the To be specific, Section 30 provides that exempt organizations like non-stock, non-
Constitution.91 There is no exemption because the asset is not used actually, directly profit educational institutions shall not be taxed on income received by them as
and exclusively for educational purposes. The commercial use of the property is also such.
not incidental to and reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the main
purpose of a university, which is to educate its students. Section 27 (B), on the other hand, states that [p]roprietary educational
institutions...which are nonprofit shall pay a tax of ten percent (10%) on their
However, if the university actually, directly and exclusively uses for educational taxable income...Provided, that if the gross income from unrelated trade, business or
purposes the revenues earned from the lease of its school building, such revenues other activity exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the total gross income derived by such
shall be exempt from taxes and duties. The tax exemption no longer hinges on the educational institutions...[the regular corporate income tax of 30%] shall be
use of the asset from which the revenues were earned, but on the actual, direct and imposed on the entire taxable income... 92
exclusive use of the revenues for educational purposes.
By the Tax Code's clear terms, a proprietary educational institution is entitled only
Parenthetically, income and revenues of non-stock, non-profit educational to the reduced rate of 10% corporate income tax. The reduced rate is applicable only
institution not used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes are if: (1) the proprietary educational institution is non� profit and (2) its gross income
not exempt from duties and taxes. To avail of the exemption, the taxpayer from unrelated trade, business or activity does not exceed 50% of its total gross
must factually prove that it used actually, directly and exclusively for educational income.
purposes the revenues or income sought to be exempted.
Consistent with Article XIV, Section 4 (3) of the Constitution, these limitations do not
The crucial point of inquiry then is on the use of the assets or on the use of the apply to non-stock, non-profit educational institutions.
revenues. These are two things that must be viewed and treated separately. But so
long as the assets or revenues are used actually, directly and exclusively for Thus, we declare the last paragraph of Section 30 of the Tax Code without force and
educational purposes, they are exempt from duties and taxes. effect for being contrary to the Constitution insofar as it subjects to tax the income
and revenues of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions used actually, directly
The tax exemption granted by the Constitution to non-stock, non-profit and exclusively for educational purpose. We make this declaration in the exercise of
educational institutions, unlike the exemption that may be availed of by and consistent with our duty93 to uphold the primacy of the Constitution. 94
proprietary educational institutions, is not subject to limitations imposed by
law. Finally, we stress that our holding here pertains only to non-stock, non-profit
educational institutions and does not cover the other exempt organizations under
That the Constitution treats non-stock, non-profit educational institutions Section 30 of the Tax Code.
differently from proprietary educational institutions cannot be doubted. As
discussed, the privilege granted to the former is conditioned only on the actual, For all these reasons, we hold that the income and revenues of DLSU proven to have
direct and exclusive use of their revenues and assets for educational purposes. In been used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes are exempt
clear contrast, the tax privilege granted to the latter may be subject to limitations from duties and taxes.
imposed by law.
II. The LOA issued to DLSU is not entirely void. The assessment for taxable
We spell out below the difference in treatment if only to highlight the privileged year 2003 is valid.
status of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions compared with their
TAXATION CASES |57

DLSU objects to the CTA En Banc's conclusion that the LOA is valid for taxable year includes unverified prior years. This does not mean, however, that the entire LOA is
2003 and insists that the entire LOA should be voided for being contrary to RMO No. void.
43-90, which provides that if tax audit includes more than one taxable period, the
other periods or years shall be specifically indicated in the LOA. As the CTA correctly held, the assessment for taxable year 2003 is valid because this
taxable period is specified in the LOA. DLSU was fully apprised that it was being
A LOA is the authority given to the appropriate revenue officer to examine the books audited for taxable year 2003. Corollarily, the assessments for taxable years 2001
of account and other accounting records of the taxpayer in order to determine the and 2002 are void for having been unspecified on separate LOAs as required under
taxpayer's correct internal revenue liabilities 95 and for the purpose of collecting the RMO No. 43-90.
correct amount oftax,96 in accordance with Section 5 of the Tax Code, which gives the
CIR the power to obtain information, to summon/examine, and take testimony of Lastly, the Commissioner's claim that DLSU failed to raise the issue of the LOA's
persons. The LOA commences the audit process 97 and informs the taxpayer that it is validity at the CTA Division, and thus, should not have been entertained on appeal, is
under audit for possible deficiency tax assessment. not accurate.

Given the purposes of a LOA, is there basis to completely nullify the LOA issued to On the contrary, the CTA En Banc found that the issue of the LOA's validity came up
DLSU, and consequently, disregard the BIR and the CTA's findings of tax deficiency during the trial.100 DLSU then raised the issue in its memorandum and motion for
for taxable year 2003? partial reconsideration with the CTA Division. DLSU raised it again on appeal to the
CTA En Banc. Thus, the CTA En Banc could, as it did, pass upon the validity of the
We answer in the negative. LOA.101 Besides, the Commissioner had the opportunity to argue for the validity of
the LOA at the CTA En Banc but she chose not to file her comment and memorandum
The relevant provision is Section C of RMO No. 43-90, the pertinent portion of which despite notice.102
reads:
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary III. The CTA correctly admitted the supplemental evidence formally offered by
DLSU.
3. A Letter of Authority [LOA] should cover a taxable period not exceeding
one taxable year. The practice of issuing [LOAs] covering audit of unverified The Commissioner objects to the CTA Division's admission of DLSU's supplemental
prior years is hereby prohibited. If the audit of a taxpayer shall include pieces of documentary evidence.
more than one taxable period, the other periods or years shall be
specifically indicated in the [LOA].98 To recall, DLSU formally offered its supplemental evidence upon filing its motion for
What this provision clearly prohibits is the practice of issuing LOAs covering audit reconsideration with the CTA Division.103 The CTA Division admitted the
of unverified prior years. RMO 43-90 does not say that a LOA which contains supplemental evidence, which proved that a portion of DLSU's rental income was
unverified prior years is void. It merely prescribes that if the audit includes more used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes. Consequently, the
than one taxable period, the other periods or years must be specified. The provision CTA Division reduced DLSU's tax liabilities.
read as a whole requires that if a taxpayer is audited for more than one taxable year,
the BIR must specify each taxable year or taxable period on separate LOAs. We uphold the CTA Division's admission of the supplemental evidence on distinct
but mutually reinforcing grounds, to wit: (1) the Commissioner failed to timely object
Read in this light, the requirement to specify the taxable period covered by the LOA to the formal offer of supplemental evidence; and (2) the CTA is not governed strictly
is simply to inform the taxpayer of the extent of the audit and the scope of the by the technical rules of evidence.
revenue officer's authority. Without this rule, a revenue officer can unduly burden
the taxpayer by demanding random accounting records from random unverified First, the failure to object to the offered evidence renders it admissible, and the court
years, which may include documents from as far back as ten years in cases cannot, on its own, disregard such evidence. 104
of fraud audit.99
The Court has held that if a party desires the court to reject the evidence offered, it
In the present case, the LOA issued to DLSU is for Fiscal Year Ending 2003 and must so state in the form of a timely objection and it cannot raise the objection to
Unverified Prior Years. The LOA does not strictly comply with RMO 43-90 because it the evidence for the first time on appeal. 105
TAXATION CASES |58

If anything, the liberal application of the rules assumes greater force and
Because of a party's failure to timely object, the evidence offered becomes part of the significance in the case of a taxpayer who claims a constitutionally granted tax
evidence in the case. As a consequence, all the parties are considered bound by any exemption. While the taxpayers in the cited cases claimed refund of excess tax
outcome arising from the offer of evidence properly presented. 106 payments based on the Tax Code,115 DLSU is claiming tax exemption based on the
Constitution. If liberality is afforded to taxpayers who paid more than they should
As disclosed by DLSU, the Commissioner did not oppose the supplemental formal have under a statute, then with more reason that we should allow a taxpayer to
offer of evidence despite notice.107 The Commissioner objected to the admission of prove its exemption from tax based on the Constitution.
the supplemental evidence only when the case was on appeal to the CTA En Banc. By
the time the Commissioner raised her objection, it was too late; the formal offer, Hence, we sustain the CTA's admission of DLSU's supplemental offer of evidence not
admission and evaluation of the supplemental evidence were all fait accompli. only because the Commissioner failed to promptly object, but more so because the
strict application of the technical tules of evidence may defeat the intent of the
We clarify that while the Commissioner's failure to promptly object had no bearing Constitution.
on the materiality or sufficiency of the supplemental evidence admitted, she was
bound by the outcome of the CTA Division's assessment of the evidence. 108 IV. The CTA's appreciation of evidence is generally binding on the Court unless
compelling reasons justify otherwise.
Second, the CTA is not governed strictly by the technical rules of evidence. The CTA
Division's admission of the formal offer of supplemental evidence, without prompt It is doctrinal that the Court will not lightly set aside the conclusions reached by the
objection from the Commissioner, was thus justified. CTA which, by the very nature of its function of being dedicated exclusively to the
resolution of tax problems, has developed an expertise on the subject, unless there
Notably, this Court had in the past admitted and considered evidence attached to the has been an abuse or improvident exercise of authority. 116 We thus accord
taxpayers' motion for reconsideration. the findings of fact by the CTA with the highest respect. These findings of facts can
only be disturbed on appeal if they are not supported by substantial evidence or
In the case of BPI-Family Savings Bank v. Court of Appeals,109 the tax refund claimant there is a showing of gross error or abuse on the part of the CTA. In the absence of
attached to its motion for reconsideration with the CTA its Final Adjustment Return. any clear and convincing proof to the contrary, this Court must presume that the CTA
The Commissioner, as in the present case, did not oppose the taxpayer's motion for rendered a decision which is valid in every respect.117
reconsideration and the admission of the Final Adjustment Return.110 We thus
admitted and gave weight to the Final Adjustment Return although it was only We sustain the factual findings of the CTA.
submitted upon motion for reconsideration.
The parties failed to raise credible basis for us to disturb the CTA's findings that
We held that while it is true that strict procedural rules generally frown upon the DLSU had used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes
submission of documents after the trial, the law creating the CTA specifically a portion of its assessed income and that it had remitted the DST payments though
provides that proceedings before it shall not be governed strictly by the technical an online imprinting machine.
rules of evidence111 and that the paramount consideration remains the
ascertainment of truth. We ruled that procedural rules should not bar courts from a. DLSU used actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes
considering undisputed facts to arrive at a just determination of a controversy. 112 a portion of its assessed income.
To see how the CTA arrived at its factual findings, we review the process undertaken,
We applied the same reasoning in the subsequent cases of Filinvest Development from which it deduced that DLSU successfully proved that it used actually, directly
Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue 113 and Commissioner of Internal and exclusively for educational purposes a portion of its rental income.
Revenue v. PERF Realty Corporation,114 where the taxpayers also submitted the
supplemental supporting document only upon filing their motions for The CTA reduced DLSU's deficiency income tax and VAT liabilities in view of the
reconsideration. submission of the supplemental evidence, which consisted of statement of receipts,
statement of disbursement and fund balance and statement of fund changes.118
Although the cited cases involved claims for tax refunds, we also dispense with the
strict application of the technical rules of evidence in the present tax assessmentcase. These documents showed that DLSU borrowed P93.86 Million, 119 which was used to
TAXATION CASES |59

build the university's Sports Complex. Based on these pieces of evidence, the CTA and verified by the Independent CPA. Thus, we see no persuasive reason to deviate
found that DLSU's rental income from its concessionaires were indeed transmitted from these factual findings.
and used for the payment of this loan. The CTA held that the degree of
preponderance of evidence was sufficiently met to prove actual, direct and exclusive However, while we generally respect the factual findings of the CTA, it does not mean
use for educational purposes. that we are bound by its conclusions. In the present case, we do not agree with
the method used by the CTA to arrive at DLSU's unsubstantiated rental income (i.e.,
The CTA also found that DLSU's rental income from other concessionaires, which income not proved to have been actually, directly and exclusively used for
were allegedly deposited to a fund (CF-CPA Account),120 intended for the university's educational purposes).
capital projects, was not proved to have been used actually, directly and
exclusively for educational purposes. The CTA observed that "[DLSU]...failed to To recall, the CTA found that DLSU earned a rental income of P10,610,379.00 in
fully account for and substantiate all the disbursements from the [fund]." Thus, the taxable year 2003.125 DLSU earned this income from leasing a portion of its premises
CTA "cannot ascertain whether rental income from the [other] concessionaires was to: 1) MTO-Sports Complex, 2) La Casita, 3) Alarey, Inc., 4) Zaide Food Corp., 5) Capri
indeed used for educational purposes."121 International, and 6) MTO Bookstore.126

To stress, the CTA's factual findings were based on and supported by the report of To prove that its rental income was used for educational purposes, DLSU identified
the Independent CPA who reviewed, audited and examined the voluminous the transactions where the rental income was expended, viz.:
documents submitted by DLSU. 1) P4,007,724.00127 used to pay the loan obtained by DLSU to build the Sports
Complex; and 2) P6,602,655.00 transferred to the CF-CPA Account.128
Under the CTA Revised Rules, an Independent CPA's functions include: (a)
examination and verification of receipts, invoices, vouchers and other long accounts; DLSU also submitted documents to the Independent CPA to prove that the
(b) reproduction of, and comparison of such reproduction with, and certification P6,602,655.00 transferred to the CF-CPA Account was used actually, directly and
that the same are faithful copies of original documents, and pre-marking of exclusively for educational purposes. According to the Independent CPA' findings,
documentary exhibits consisting of voluminous documents; (c) preparation of DLSU was able to substantiate disbursements from the CF-CPA Account amounting
schedules or summaries containing a chronological listing of the numbers, dates and to P6,259,078.30.
amounts covered by receipts or invoices or other relevant documents and the
amount(s) of taxes paid; (d) making findings as to compliance with Contradicting the findings of the Independent CPA, the CTA concluded that out of
substantiation requirements under pertinent tax laws, regulations and the P10,610,379.00 rental income, P4,841,066.65 was unsubstantiated, and thus,
jurisprudence; (e) submission of a formal report with certification of authenticity subject to income tax and VAT.129
and veracity of findings and conclusions in the performance of the audit; (f)
testifying on such formal report; and (g) performing such other functions as the CTA The CTA then concluded that the ratio of substantiated disbursements to the total
may direct.122 disbursements from the CF-CPA Account for taxable year 2003 is only 26.68%. 130The
CTA held as follows:
Based on the Independent CPA's report and on its own appreciation of the evidence, chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary
the CTA held that only the portion of the rental income pertaining to However, as regards petitioner's rental income from Alarey, Inc., Zaide Food Corp.,
the substantiated disbursements (i.e., proved by receipts, vouchers, etc.) from the CF- Capri International and MTO Bookstore, which were transmitted to the CF-CPA
CPA Account was considered as used actually, directly and exclusively for Account, petitioner again failed to fully account for and substantiate all the
educational purposes. Consequently, the unaccounted and unsubstantiated disbursements from the CF-CPA Account; thus failing to prove that the rental income
disbursements must be subjected to income tax and VAT. 123 derived therein were actually, directly and exclusively used for educational
purposes. Likewise, the findings of the Court-Commissioned Independent CPA show
The CTA then further reduced DLSU's tax liabilities by cancelling the assessments for that the disbursements from the CF-CPA Account for fiscal year 2003 amounts to P-
taxable years 2001 and 2002 due to the defective LOA. 124 6,259,078.30 only. Hence, this portion of the rental income, being the substantiated
disbursements of the CF-CPA Account, was considered by the Special First Division
The Court finds that the above fact-finding process undertaken by the CTA shows as used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes. Since for fiscal
that it based its ruling on the evidence on record, which we reiterate, were examined year 2003, the total disbursements per voucher is P6,259,078.3 (Exhibit "LL-25-C"),
TAXATION CASES |60

and the total disbursements per subsidiary ledger amounts to P23,463,543.02 million is tax-exempt so that it is required to prove that all these
(Exhibit "LL-29-C"), the ratio of substantiated disbursements for fiscal year 2003 is disbursements had been made for educational purposes?
26.68% (P6,259,078.30/P23,463,543.02). Thus, the substantiated portion of CF-CPA
Disbursements for fiscal year 2003, arrived at by multiplying the ratio of 26.68% We answer in the negative.
with the total rent income added to and used in the CF-CPA Account in the amount of
P6,602,655.00 ts P1,761,588.35.131 (emphasis supplied)ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary The records show that DLSU never claimed that the total CF-CPA disbursements of
For better understanding, we summarize the CTA's computation as follows: P23.46 million had been for educational purposes and should thus be tax-exempt;
DLSU only claimed P10.61 million for tax�exemption and should thus be required
1. The CTA subtracted the rent income used in the construction of the Sports to prove that this amount had been used as claimed.
Complex (P4,007,724.00) from the rental income (P10,610,379.00) earned
from the abovementioned concessionaries. The difference (P6,602,655.00) Of this amount, P4.01 had been proven to have been used for educational purposes,
was the portion claimed to have been deposited to the CF-CPA Account. as confirmed by the Independent CPA. The amount in issue is therefore the balance
of P6.60 million which was transferred to the CF-CPA which in turn made
disbursements of P23.46 million for various general purposes, among them the
2. The CTA then subtracted the supposed substantiated portion of CF-CPA P6.60 million transferred by DLSU.
disbursements (P1,761,308.37) from the P6,602,655.00 to arrive at
the supposed unsubstantiated portion of the rental income Significantly, the Independent CPA confirmed that the CF-CPA made disbursements
(P4,841,066.65).132 for educational purposes in year 2003 in the amount P6.26 million. Based on these
given figures, the CTA concluded that the expenses for educational purposes that
3. The substantiated portion of CF-CPA disbursements (P1,761,308.37)133 was had been coursed through the CF-CPA should be prorated so that only the portion
derived by multiplying the rental income claimed to have been added to that P6.26 million bears to the total CF�-CPA disbursements should be credited to
the CF-CPA Account (P6,602,655.00) by 26.68% or the ratio DLSU for tax exemption.
of substantiated disbursements to total disbursements (P23,463,543.02).
This approach, in our view, is flawed given the constitutional requirement that
4. The 26.68% ratio134 was the result of dividing the substantiated revenues actually and directly used for educational purposes should be tax-exempt.
disbursements from the CF-CPA Account as found by the Independent CPA As already mentioned above, DLSU is not claiming that the whole P23.46 million CF-
(P6,259,078.30) by the total disbursements (P23,463,543.02) from the CPA disbursement had been used for educational purposes; it only claims that P6.60
same account. million transferred to CF-CPA had been used for educational purposes. This was
We find that this system of calculation is incorrect and does not truly give effect to what DLSU needed to prove to have actually and directly used for educational
the constitutional grant of tax exemption to non-stock, non�profit educational purposes.
institutions. The CTA's reasoning is flawed because it required DLSU to substantiate
an amount that is greater than the rental income deposited in the CF-CPA Account in That this fund had been first deposited into a separate fund (the CF�-CPA
2003. established to fund capital projects) lends peculiarity to the facts of this case, but
does not detract from the fact that the deposited funds were DLSU revenue funds
To reiterate, to be exempt from tax, DLSU has the burden of proving that the that had been confirmed and proven to have been actually and directly used for
proceeds of its rental income (which amounted to a total of P10.61 million) 135 were educational purposes via the CF-CPA. That the CF-CPA might have had other sources
used for educational purposes. This amount was divided into two parts: (a) the of funding is irrelevant because the assessment in the present case pertains only to
P4.01 million, which was used to pay the loan obtained for the construction of the the rental income which DLSU indisputably earned as revenue in 2003. That the
Sports Complex; and (b) the P6.60 million,136 which was transferred to the CF-CPA proven CF-CPA funds used for educational purposes should not be prorated as part
account. of its total CF-�CPA disbursements for purposes of crediting to DLSU is also logical
because no claim whatsoever had been made that the totality of the CF-CPA
For year 2003, the total disbursement from the CF-CPA account amounted to P23.46 disbursements had been for educational purposes. No prorating is necessary; to
million.137 These figures, read in light of the constitutional exemption, raises the state the obvious, exemption is based on actual and direct use and this DLSU has
question: does DLSU claim that the whole total CF-CPA disbursement of P23.46 indisputably proven.
TAXATION CASES |61

Based on these considerations, DLSU should therefore be liable only for the Given the lack of complete identity of the issues involved, the CTA held that it had to
difference between what it claimed and what it has proven. In more concrete terms, evaluate the separate sets of evidence differently. The CTA likewise stressed that
DLSU only had to prove that its rental income for taxable year 2003 DLSU and Ateneo gave distinct defenses and that its wisdom "cannot be equated on
(P10,610,379.00) was used for educational purposes. Hence, while the total its decision on two different cases with two different issues."141
disbursements from the CF-CPA Account amounted to P23,463,543.02, DLSU only
had to substantiate its P10.6 million rental income, part of which was the DLSU disagrees with the CTA and argues that the entire assessment must be
P6,602,655.00 transferred to the CF-CPA account. Of this latter amount, P6.259 cancelled because it submitted similar, if not stronger sets of evidence, as Ateneo.
million was substantiated to have been used for educational purposes. We reject DLSU's argument for being non sequitur. Its reliance on the concept of
uniformity of taxation is also incorrect.
To summarize, we thus revise the tax base for deficiency income tax and VAT for
taxable year 2003 as follows: First, even granting that Ateneo and DLSU submitted similar evidence,
chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary the sufficiency and materiality of the evidence supporting their respective claims
� CTA Decision138 Revised for tax exemption would necessarily differ because their attendant issues and facts
differ.
Rental income 10,610,379.00 10,610,379.00
To state the obvious, the amount of income received by DLSU and by Ateneo during
Less: Rent income used in construction of the taxable years they were assessed varied. The amount of tax assessment
4,007,724.00 4,007,724.00
the Sports Complex also varied. The amount of income proven to have been used for educational
purposes also varied because the amount substantiated varied.142 Thus, the amount
� � �
of tax assessment cancelled by the CTA varied.
Rental income deposited to the CF-CPA
6,602,655.00 6,602.655.00 On the one hand, the BIR assessed DLSU a total tax deficiency of P17,303,001.12 for
Account
taxable years 2001, 2002 and 2003. On the other hand, the BIR assessed Ateneo a
� � � total deficiency tax of P8,864,042.35 for the same period. Notably, DLSU was
assessed deficiency DST, while Ateneo was not. 143
Less: Substantiated portion of CF-CPA
1,761,588.35 6,259,078.30
disbursements Thus, although both Ateneo and DLSU claimed that they used their rental income
actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes by submitting similar
� � �
evidence, e.g., the testimony of their employees on the use of university revenues,
Tax base for deficiency income tax and the report of the Independent CPA, their income summaries, financial statements,
4,841,066.65 343,576.70 vouchers, etc., the fact remains that DLSU failed to prove that a portion of its income
VAT
and revenues had indeed been used for educational purposes.
On DLSU's argument that the CTA should have appreciated its evidence in the same
way as it did with the evidence submitted by Ateneo in another separate case, the
The CTA significantly found that some documents that could have fully supported
CTA explained that the issue in the Ateneo case was not the same as the issue in the
DLSU's claim were not produced in court. Indeed, the Independent CPA testified that
present case.
some disbursements had not been proven to have been used actually, directly and
exclusively for educational purposes.144
The issue in the Ateneo case was whether or not Ateneo could be held liable to pay
income taxes and VAT under certain BIR and Department of Finance issuances 139that
The final nail on the question of evidence is DLSU's own admission that the original
required the educational institution to own and operate the canteens, or other
of these documents had not in fact been produced before the CTA although it claimed
commercial enterprises within its campus, as condition for tax exemption. The CTA
that there was no bad faith on its part.145 To our mind, this admission is a good
held that the Constitution does not require the educational institution to own or
indicator of how the Ateneo and the DLSU cases varied, resulting in DLSU's failure to
operate these commercial establishments to avail of the exemption. 140
substantiate a portion of its claimed exemption.
TAXATION CASES |62

taxpayers who can use the On-Line Electronic DST Imprinting Machine.
Further, DLSU's invocation of Section 5, Rule 130 of the Revised Rules on Evidence,
that the contents of the missing supporting documents were proven by its recital in We sustain the findings of the CTA. The Commissioner's argument lacks basis in both
some other authentic documents on record,146 can no longer be entertained at this the Tax Code and the relevant revenue regulations.
late stage of the proceeding. The CTA did not rule on this particular claim. The CTA
also made no finding on DLSU's assertion of lack of bad faith. Besides, it is not our DST on documents, loan agreements, and papers shall be levied, collected and paid
duty to go over these documents to test the truthfulness of their contents, this Court for by the person making, signing, issuing, accepting, or transferring the same. 150The
not being a trier of facts. Tax Code provides that whenever one party to the document enjoys exemption from
DST, the other party not exempt from DST shall be directly liable for the tax. Thus, it
Second, DLSU misunderstands the concept of uniformity oftaxation. Equality and is clear that DST shall be payable by any party to the document, such that the
uniformity of taxation means that all taxable articles or kinds of property of the payment and compliance by one shall mean the full settlement of the DST due on the
same class shall be taxed at the same rate. 147 A tax is uniform when it operates with document.
the same force and effect in every place where the subject of it is found. 148 The
concept requires that all subjects of taxation similarly situated should be treated In the present case, DLSU entered into mortgage and loan agreements with banks.
alike and placed in equal footing.149 These agreements are subject to DST. 151 For the purpose of showing that the DST on
the loan agreement has been paid, DLSU presented its agreements bearing the
In our view, the CTA placed Ateneo and DLSU in equal footing. The CTA treated them imprint showing that DST on the document has been paid by the bank, its
alike because their income proved to have been used actually, directly and counterparty. The imprint should be sufficient proof that DST has been paid. Thus,
exclusively for educational purposes were exempted from taxes. The CTA equally DLSU cannot be further assessed for deficiency DST on the said documents.
applied the requirements in the YMCA case to test if they indeed used their revenues
for educational purposes. Finally, it is true that educational institutions are not included in the class of
taxpayers who can pay and remit DST through the On-Line Electronic DST Imprinting
DLSU can only assert that the CTA violated the rule on uniformity if it can show that, Machine under RR No. 9-2000. As correctly held by the CTA, this is irrelevant
despite proving that it used actually, directly and exclusively for educational because it was not DLSU who used the On-Line Electronic DST Imprinting
purposes its income and revenues, the CTA still affirmed the imposition of taxes. Machine but the bank that handled its mortgage and loan transactions. RR No. 9-
That the DLSU secured a different result happened because it failed to fully prove 2000 expressly includes banks in the class of taxpayers that can use the On-Line
that it used actually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes its revenues Electronic DST Imprinting Machine.
and income.
Thus, the Court sustains the finding of the CTA that DLSU proved the payment of the
On this point, we remind DLSU that the rule on uniformity of taxation does not mean assessed DST deficiency, except for the unpaid balance of P13,265.48.152
that subjects of taxation similarly situated are treated in literally the same way in all
and every occasion. The fact that the Ateneo and DLSU are both non-stock, non- WHEREFORE, premises considered, we DENY the petition of the Commissioner of
profit educational institutions, does not mean that the CTA or this Court would Internal Revenue in G.R. No. 196596 and AFFIRM the December 10, 2010 decision
similarly decide every case for (or against) both universities. Success in tax and March 29, 2011 resolution of the Court of Tax Appeals En Banc in CTA En
litigation, like in any other litigation, depends to a large extent on the sufficiency of Banc Case No. 622, except for the total amount of deficiency tax liabilities of De La
evidence. DLSU's evidence was wanting, thus, the CTA was correct in not fully Salle University, Inc., which had been reduced.
cancelling its tax liabilities.
We also DENY both the petition of De La Salle University, Inc. in G.R. No. 198841 and
b. DLSU proved its payment of the DST the petition of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in G.R. No. 198941 and
thus AFFIRM the June 8, 2011 decision and October 4, 2011 resolution of the Court
The CTA affirmed DLSU's claim that the DST due on its mortgage and loan of Tax Appeals En Banc in CTA En Banc Case No. 671, with the MODIFICATIONthat
transactions were paid and remitted through its bank's On-Line Electronic DST the base for the deficiency income tax and VAT for taxable year 2003
Imprinting Machine. The Commissioner argues that DLSU is not allowed to use this is P343,576.70.
method of payment because an educational institution is excluded from the class of
TAXATION CASES |63

On August 25, 1993, the petitioner filed a Claim for Exemption [5] from real
[4]

SO ORDERED. property taxes with the City Assessor, predicated on its claim that it is a charitable
institution. The petitioners request was denied, and a petition was, thereafter, filed
before the Local Board of Assessment Appeals of Quezon City (QC-LBAA, for brevity)
LUNG CENTER OF THE PHILIPPINES, petitioner, vs. QUEZON CITY and for the reversal of the resolution of the City Assessor. The petitioner alleged that
CONSTANTINO P. ROSAS, in his capacity as City Assessor of Quezon under Section 28, paragraph 3 of the 1987 Constitution, the property is exempt from
City, respondents. real property taxes. It averred that a minimum of 60% of its hospital beds are
exclusively used for charity patients and that the major thrust of its hospital
DECISION operation is to serve charity patients. The petitioner contends that it is a charitable
institution and, as such, is exempt from real property taxes. The QC-LBAA rendered
CALLEJO, SR., J.: judgment dismissing the petition and holding the petitioner liable for real property
This is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, taxes.[6]
as amended, of the Decision[1] dated July 17, 2000 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. The QC-LBAAs decision was, likewise, affirmed on appeal by the Central Board
SP No. 57014 which affirmed the decision of the Central Board of Assessment of Assessment Appeals of Quezon City (CBAA, for brevity) [7] which ruled that the
Appeals holding that the lot owned by the petitioner and its hospital building petitioner was not a charitable institution and that its real properties were not
constructed thereon are subject to assessment for purposes of real property tax. actually, directly and exclusively used for charitable purposes; hence, it was not
entitled to real property tax exemption under the constitution and the law. The
petitioner sought relief from the Court of Appeals, which rendered judgment
affirming the decision of the CBAA.[8]
The Antecedents
Undaunted, the petitioner filed its petition in this Court contending that:
The petitioner Lung Center of the Philippines is a non-stock and non-profit
entity established on January 16, 1981 by virtue of Presidential Decree No. 1823. [2] It A. THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN DECLARING PETITIONER AS NOT
is the registered owner of a parcel of land, particularly described as Lot No. RP-3-B- ENTITLED TO REALTY TAX EXEMPTIONS ON THE GROUND THAT
3A-1-B-1, SWO-04-000495, located at Quezon Avenue corner Elliptical Road, Central ITS LAND, BUILDING AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUBJECT OF
District, Quezon City. The lot has an area of 121,463 square meters and is covered by ASSESSMENT, ARE NOT ACTUALLY, DIRECTLY AND EXCLUSIVELY
Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT) No. 261320 of the Registry of Deeds of Quezon DEVOTED FOR CHARITABLE PURPOSES.
City. Erected in the middle of the aforesaid lot is a hospital known as
the Lung Center of the Philippines. A big space at the ground floor is being leased to B. WHILE PETITIONER IS NOT DECLARED AS REAL PROPERTY TAX
private parties, for canteen and small store spaces, and to medical or professional EXEMPT UNDER ITS CHARTER, PD 1823, SAID EXEMPTION MAY
practitioners who use the same as their private clinics for their patients whom they NEVERTHELESS BE EXTENDED UPON PROPER APPLICATION.
charge for their professional services. Almost one-half of the entire area on the left
side of the building along Quezon Avenue is vacant and idle, while a big portion on The petitioner avers that it is a charitable institution within the context of
the right side, at the corner of Quezon Avenue and Elliptical Road, is being leased for Section 28(3), Article VI of the 1987 Constitution. It asserts that its character as a
commercial purposes to a private enterprise known as the Elliptical Orchids charitable institution is not altered by the fact that it admits paying patients and
and Garden Center. renders medical services to them, leases portions of the land to private parties, and
rents out portions of the hospital to private medical practitioners from which it
The petitioner accepts paying and non-paying patients. It also renders medical derives income to be used for operational expenses. The petitioner points out that
services to out-patients, both paying and non-paying. Aside from its income from for the years 1995 to 1999, 100% of its out-patients were charity patients and of the
paying patients, the petitioner receives annual subsidies from the government. hospitals 282-bed capacity, 60% thereof, or 170 beds, is allotted to charity
patients. It asserts that the fact that it receives subsidies from the government
On June 7, 1993, both the land and the hospital building of the petitioner were attests to its character as a charitable institution. It contends that the exclusivity
assessed for real property taxes in the amount of P4,554,860 by the City Assessor of required in the Constitution does not necessarily mean solely. Hence, even if a
Quezon City.[3]Accordingly, Tax Declaration Nos. C-021-01226 (16-2518) and C-021- portion of its real estate is leased out to private individuals from whom it derives
01231 (15-2518-A) were issued for the land and the hospital building, respectively.
TAXATION CASES |64

income, it does not lose its character as a charitable institution, and its exemption The Issues
from the payment of real estate taxes on its real property. The petitioner cited our
ruling in Herrera v. QC-BAA[9] to bolster its pose. The petitioner further contends that The issues for resolution are the following: (a) whether the petitioner is a
even if P.D. No. 1823 does not exempt it from the payment of real estate taxes, it is charitable institution within the context of Presidential Decree No. 1823 and the
not precluded from seeking tax exemption under the 1987 Constitution. 1973 and 1987 Constitutions and Section 234(b) of Republic Act No. 7160; and (b)
whether the real properties of the petitioner are exempt from real property taxes.
In their comment on the petition, the respondents aver that the petitioner is
not a charitable entity. The petitioners real property is not exempt from the payment
of real estate taxes under P.D. No. 1823 and even under the 1987 Constitution
because it failed to prove that it is a charitable institution and that the said property The Courts Ruling
is actually, directly and exclusively used for charitable purposes. The respondents The petition is partially granted.
noted that in a newspaper report, it appears that graft charges were filed with the
Sandiganbayan against the director of the petitioner, its administrative officer, and On the first issue, we hold that the petitioner is a charitable institution within
Zenaida Rivera, the proprietress of the Elliptical Orchids and Garden Center, for the context of the 1973 and 1987 Constitutions. To determine whether an enterprise
entering into a lease contract over 7,663.13 square meters of the property in 1990 is a charitable institution/entity or not, the elements which should be considered
for only P20,000 a month, when the monthly rental should be P357,000 a month as include the statute creating the enterprise, its corporate purposes, its constitution
determined by the Commission on Audit; and that instead of complying with the and by-laws, the methods of administration, the nature of the actual work
directive of the COA for the cancellation of the contract for being grossly prejudicial performed, the character of the services rendered, the indefiniteness of the
to the government, the petitioner renewed the same on March 13, 1995 for a beneficiaries, and the use and occupation of the properties. [11]
monthly rental of only P24,000. They assert that the petitioner uses the subsidies
granted by the government for charity patients and uses the rest of its income from In the legal sense, a charity may be fully defined as a gift, to be applied
the property for the benefit of paying patients, among other purposes. They aver consistently with existing laws, for the benefit of an indefinite number of persons,
that the petitioner failed to adduce substantial evidence that 100% of its out- either by bringing their minds and hearts under the influence of education or
patients and 170 beds in the hospital are reserved for indigent patients. The religion, by assisting them to establish themselves in life or otherwise lessening the
respondents further assert, thus: burden of government.[12] It may be applied to almost anything that tend to promote
13. That the claims/allegations of the Petitioner LCP do not speak well of its record the well-doing and well-being of social man. It embraces the improvement and
of service. That before a patient is admitted for treatment in the Center, first promotion of the happiness of man. [13] The word charitable is not restricted to relief
impression is that it is pay-patient and required to pay a certain amount as of the poor or sick.[14] The test of a charity and a charitable organization are in law
deposit. That even if a patient is living below the poverty line, he is charged with the same. The test whether an enterprise is charitable or not is whether it exists to
high hospital bills. And, without these bills being first settled, the poor patient carry out a purpose reorganized in law as charitable or whether it is maintained for
cannot be allowed to leave the hospital or be discharged without first paying the gain, profit, or private advantage.
hospital bills or issue a promissory note guaranteed and indorsed by an influential
Under P.D. No. 1823, the petitioner is a non-profit and non-stock corporation
agency or person known only to the Center; that even the remains of deceased poor
which, subject to the provisions of the decree, is to be administered by the Office of
patients suffered the same fate.Moreover, before a patient is admitted for treatment
the President of the Philippines with the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of
as free or charity patient, one must undergo a series of interviews and must submit
Human Settlements. It was organized for the welfare and benefit of the Filipino
all the requirements needed by the Center, usually accompanied by endorsement by
people principally to help combat the high incidence of lung and pulmonary diseases
an influential agency or person known only to the Center. These facts were heard
in the Philippines. The raison detre for the creation of the petitioner is stated in the
and admitted by the Petitioner LCP during the hearings before the Honorable QC-
decree, viz:
BAA and Honorable CBAA. These are the reasons of indigent patients, instead of
Whereas, for decades, respiratory diseases have been a priority concern, having
seeking treatment with the Center, they prefer to be treated at the Quezon
been the leading cause of illness and death in the Philippines, comprising more than
Institute. Can such practice by the Center be called charitable? [10]
45% of the total annual deaths from all causes, thus, exacting a tremendous toll on
human resources, which ailments are likely to increase and degenerate into serious
lung diseases on account of unabated pollution, industrialization and unchecked
cigarette smoking in the country;
TAXATION CASES |65

Whereas, the more common lung diseases are, to a great extent, preventable, and the purpose of achieving a more effective programmatic approach on the common
curable with early and adequate medical care, immunization and through prompt problems relative to the objectives enumerated herein;
and intensive prevention and health education programs; 8. To seek and obtain assistance in any form from both international and local
Whereas, there is an urgent need to consolidate and reinforce existing programs, foundations and organizations; and to administer grants and funds that may be
strategies and efforts at preventing, treating and rehabilitating people affected by given to the organization;
lung diseases, and to undertake research and training on the cure and prevention of 9. To extend, whenever possible and expedient, medical services to the public and, in
lung diseases, through a Lung Center which will house and nurture the above and general, to promote and protect the health of the masses of our people, which has
related activities and provide tertiary-level care for more difficult and problematical long been recognized as an economic asset and a social blessing;
cases; 10. To help prevent, relieve and alleviate the lung or pulmonary afflictions and
Whereas, to achieve this purpose, the Government intends to provide material and maladies of the people in any and all walks of life, including those who are poor and
financial support towards the establishment and maintenance of a Lung Center for needy, all without regard to or discrimination, because of race, creed, color or
the welfare and benefit of the Filipino people.[15] political belief of the persons helped; and to enable them to obtain treatment when
such disorders occur;
The purposes for which the petitioner was created are spelled out in its 11. To participate, as circumstances may warrant, in any activity designed and
Articles of Incorporation, thus: carried on to promote the general health of the community;
SECOND: That the purposes for which such corporation is formed are as follows: 12. To acquire and/or borrow funds and to own all funds or equipment, educational
1. To construct, establish, equip, maintain, administer and conduct an integrated materials and supplies by purchase, donation, or otherwise and to dispose of and
medical institution which shall specialize in the treatment, care, rehabilitation distribute the same in such manner, and, on such basis as the Center shall, from time
and/or relief of lung and allied diseases in line with the concern of the government to time, deem proper and best, under the particular circumstances, to serve its
to assist and provide material and financial support in the establishment and general and non-profit purposes and objectives;
maintenance of a lung center primarily to benefit the people of the Philippines and 13. To buy, purchase, acquire, own, lease, hold, sell, exchange, transfer and dispose of
in pursuance of the policy of the State to secure the well-being of the people by properties, whether real or personal, for purposes herein mentioned; and
providing them specialized health and medical services and by minimizing the 14. To do everything necessary, proper, advisable or convenient for the
incidence of lung diseases in the country and elsewhere. accomplishment of any of the powers herein set forth and to do every other act and
2. To promote the noble undertaking of scientific research related to the prevention thing incidental thereto or connected therewith.[16]
of lung or pulmonary ailments and the care of lung patients, including the holding of
a series of relevant congresses, conventions, seminars and conferences; Hence, the medical services of the petitioner are to be rendered to the public in
3. To stimulate and, whenever possible, underwrite scientific researches on the general in any and all walks of life including those who are poor and the needy
biological, demographic, social, economic, eugenic and physiological aspects of lung without discrimination.After all, any person, the rich as well as the poor, may fall
or pulmonary diseases and their control; and to collect and publish the findings of sick or be injured or wounded and become a subject of charity. [17]
such research for public consumption;
4. To facilitate the dissemination of ideas and public acceptance of information on As a general principle, a charitable institution does not lose its character as
lung consciousness or awareness, and the development of fact-finding, information such and its exemption from taxes simply because it derives income from paying
and reporting facilities for and in aid of the general purposes or objects aforesaid, patients, whether out-patient, or confined in the hospital, or receives subsidies from
especially in human lung requirements, general health and physical fitness, and the government, so long as the money received is devoted or used altogether to the
other relevant or related fields; charitable object which it is intended to achieve; and no money inures to the private
5. To encourage the training of physicians, nurses, health officers, social workers and benefit of the persons managing or operating the institution. [18] In Congregational
medical and technical personnel in the practical and scientific implementation of Sunday School, etc. v. Board of Review,[19] the State Supreme Court of Illinois held,
services to lung patients; thus:
6. To assist universities and research institutions in their studies about lung [A]n institution does not lose its charitable character, and consequent exemption
diseases, to encourage advanced training in matters of the lung and related fields from taxation, by reason of the fact that those recipients of its benefits who are able
and to support educational programs of value to general health; to pay are required to do so, where no profit is made by the institution and the
7. To encourage the formation of other organizations on the national, provincial amounts so received are applied in furthering its charitable purposes, and those
and/or city and local levels; and to coordinate their various efforts and activities for benefits are refused to none on account of inability to pay therefor. The fundamental
TAXATION CASES |66

ground upon which all exemptions in favor of charitable institutions are based is the Even as we find that the petitioner is a charitable institution, we hold, anent
benefit conferred upon the public by them, and a consequent relief, to some extent, the second issue, that those portions of its real property that are leased to private
of the burden upon the state to care for and advance the interests of its citizens. [20] entities are not exempt from real property taxes as these are not actually, directly
and exclusively used for charitable purposes.
As aptly stated by the State Supreme Court of South Dakota in Lutheran
Hospital Association of South Dakota v. Baker:[21] The settled rule in this jurisdiction is that laws granting exemption from tax
[T]he fact that paying patients are taken, the profits derived from attendance upon are construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the
these patients being exclusively devoted to the maintenance of the charity, seems taxing power. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception. The effect of an
rather to enhance the usefulness of the institution to the poor; for it is a matter of exemption is equivalent to an appropriation. Hence, a claim for exemption from tax
common observation amongst those who have gone about at all amongst the payments must be clearly shown and based on language in the law too plain to be
suffering classes, that the deserving poor can with difficulty be persuaded to enter mistaken.[26] As held in Salvation Army v. Hoehn:[27]
an asylum of any kind confined to the reception of objects of charity; and that their An intention on the part of the legislature to grant an exemption from the taxing
honest pride is much less wounded by being placed in an institution in which paying power of the state will never be implied from language which will admit of any other
patients are also received. The fact of receiving money from some of the patients reasonable construction. Such an intention must be expressed in clear and
does not, we think, at all impair the character of the charity, so long as the money unmistakable terms, or must appear by necessary implication from the language
thus received is devoted altogether to the charitable object which the institution is used, for it is a well settled principle that, when a special privilege or exemption is
intended to further.[22] claimed under a statute, charter or act of incorporation, it is to be construed strictly
against the property owner and in favor of the public. This principle applies with
The money received by the petitioner becomes a part of the trust fund and peculiar force to a claim of exemption from taxation . [28]
must be devoted to public trust purposes and cannot be diverted to private profit or
benefit.[23] Section 2 of Presidential Decree No. 1823, relied upon by the petitioner,
specifically provides that the petitioner shall enjoy the tax exemptions and
Under P.D. No. 1823, the petitioner is entitled to receive donations. The privileges:
petitioner does not lose its character as a charitable institution simply because the SEC. 2. TAX EXEMPTIONS AND PRIVILEGES. Being a non-profit, non-stock
gift or donation is in the form of subsidies granted by the government. As held by the corporation organized primarily to help combat the high incidence of lung and
State Supreme Court of Utah in Yorgason v. County Board of Equalization of Salt Lake pulmonary diseases in the Philippines, all donations, contributions, endowments
County:[24] and equipment and supplies to be imported by authorized entities or persons and
Second, the government subsidy payments are provided to the project. Thus, those by the Board of Trustees of the Lung Center of the Philippines, Inc., for the actual use
payments are like a gift or donation of any other kind except they come from the and benefit of the Lung Center, shall be exempt from income and gift taxes, the same
government. In both Intermountain Health Care and the present case, the crux is the further deductible in full for the purpose of determining the maximum deductible
presence or absence of material reciprocity. It is entirely irrelevant to this analysis amount under Section 30, paragraph (h), of the National Internal Revenue Code, as
that the government, rather than a private benefactor, chose to make up the deficit amended.
resulting from the exchange between St. Marks Tower and the tenants by making a The Lung Center of the Philippines shall be exempt from the payment of taxes,
contribution to the landlord, just as it would have been irrelevant in Intermountain charges and fees imposed by the Government or any political subdivision or
Health Care if the patients income supplements had come from private individuals instrumentality thereof with respect to equipment purchases made by, or for
rather than the government. the Lung Center.[29]
Therefore, the fact that subsidization of part of the cost of furnishing such housing is
by the government rather than private charitable contributions does not dictate the It is plain as day that under the decree, the petitioner does not enjoy any
denial of a charitable exemption if the facts otherwise support such an exemption, as property tax exemption privileges for its real properties as well as the building
they do here.[25] constructed thereon. If the intentions were otherwise, the same should have been
among the enumeration of tax exempt privileges under Section 2:
In this case, the petitioner adduced substantial evidence that it spent its It is a settled rule of statutory construction that the express mention of one person,
income, including the subsidies from the government for 1991 and 1992 for its thing, or consequence implies the exclusion of all others. The rule is expressed in the
patients and for the operation of the hospital. It even incurred a net loss in 1991 and familiar maxim, expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
1992 from its operations.
TAXATION CASES |67

The rule of expressio unius est exclusio alterius is formulated in a number of buildings, and improvements of the charitable institution to be considered exempt,
ways. One variation of the rule is principle that what is expressed puts an end to that the same should not only be exclusively used for charitable purposes; it is required
which is implied. Expressium facit cessare tacitum. Thus, where a statute, by its that such property be used actually and directly for such purposes. [37]
terms, is expressly limited to certain matters, it may not, by interpretation or
construction, be extended to other matters. In light of the foregoing substantial changes in the Constitution, the petitioner
cannot rely on our ruling in Herrera v. Quezon City Board of Assessment
... Appeals which was promulgated on September 30, 1961 before the 1973 and 1987
The rule of expressio unius est exclusio alterius and its variations are canons of Constitutions took effect.[38] As this Court held in Province of Abra v. Hernando:[39]
restrictive interpretation. They are based on the rules of logic and the natural Under the 1935 Constitution: Cemeteries, churches, and parsonages or convents
workings of the human mind. They are predicated upon ones own voluntary act and appurtenant thereto, and all lands, buildings, and improvements used exclusively for
not upon that of others. They proceed from the premise that the legislature would religious, charitable, or educational purposes shall be exempt from taxation. The
not have made specified enumeration in a statute had the intention been not to present Constitution added charitable institutions, mosques, and non-profit
restrict its meaning and confine its terms to those expressly mentioned. [30] cemeteries and required that for the exemption of lands, buildings, and
improvements, they should not only be exclusively but also actually and directly
The exemption must not be so enlarged by construction since the reasonable used for religious or charitable purposes. The Constitution is worded differently. The
presumption is that the State has granted in express terms all it intended to grant at change should not be ignored. It must be duly taken into consideration. Reliance on
all, and that unless the privilege is limited to the very terms of the statute the favor past decisions would have sufficed were the words actually as well as directly not
would be intended beyond what was meant.[31] added. There must be proof therefore of the actual and direct use of the lands,
Section 28(3), Article VI of the 1987 Philippine Constitution provides, thus: buildings, and improvements for religious or charitable purposes to be exempt from
(3) Charitable institutions, churches and parsonages or convents appurtenant taxation.
thereto, mosques, non-profit cemeteries, and all lands, buildings, and Under the 1973 and 1987 Constitutions and Rep. Act No. 7160 in order to be
improvements, actually,directly and exclusively used for religious, charitable or entitled to the exemption, the petitioner is burdened to prove, by clear and
educational purposes shall be exempt from taxation.[32] unequivocal proof, that (a) it is a charitable institution; and (b) its real properties
The tax exemption under this constitutional provision covers property taxes are ACTUALLY, DIRECTLY and EXCLUSIVELY used for charitable
only.[33] As Chief Justice Hilario G. Davide, Jr., then a member of the 1986 purposes. Exclusive is defined as possessed and enjoyed to the exclusion of others;
Constitutional Commission, explained: . . . what is exempted is not the institution debarred from participation or enjoyment; and exclusively is defined,
itself . . .; those exempted from real estate taxes are lands, buildings and in a manner to exclude; as enjoying a privilege exclusively. [40] If real property is used
improvements actually, directly and exclusively used for religious, charitable or for one or more commercial purposes, it is not exclusively used for the exempted
educational purposes.[34] purposes but is subject to taxation. [41] The words dominant use or principal use
cannot be substituted for the words used exclusively without doing violence to the
Consequently, the constitutional provision is implemented by Section 234(b) Constitutions and the law.[42] Solely is synonymous with exclusively.[43]
of Republic Act No. 7160 (otherwise known as the Local Government Code of 1991)
as follows: What is meant by actual, direct and exclusive use of the property for charitable
SECTION 234. Exemptions from Real Property Tax. The following are exempted from purposes is the direct and immediate and actual application of the property itself to
payment of the real property tax: the purposes for which the charitable institution is organized. It is not the use of the
... income from the real property that is determinative of whether the property is used
(b) Charitable institutions, churches, parsonages or convents appurtenant thereto, for tax-exempt purposes.[44]
mosques, non-profit or religious cemeteries and all lands, buildings, and The petitioner failed to discharge its burden to prove that the entirety of its
improvements actually, directly, and exclusively used for religious, charitable or real property is actually, directly and exclusively used for charitable purposes. While
educational purposes.[35] portions of the hospital are used for the treatment of patients and the dispensation
We note that under the 1935 Constitution, ... all lands, buildings, and of medical services to them, whether paying or non-paying, other portions thereof
improvements used exclusively for charitable purposes shall be exempt from are being leased to private individuals for their clinics and a canteen. Further, a
taxation.[36] However, under the 1973 and the present Constitutions, for lands, portion of the land is being leased to a private individual for her business enterprise
TAXATION CASES |68

under the business name Elliptical Orchids and Garden Center. Indeed, the
petitioners evidence shows that it collected P1,136,483.45 as rentals in 1991
and P1,679,999.28 for 1992 from the said lessees.
Accordingly, we hold that the portions of the land leased to private entities as
well as those parts of the hospital leased to private individuals are not exempt from
such taxes.[45] On the other hand, the portions of the land occupied by the hospital
and portions of the hospital used for its patients, whether paying or non-paying, are
exempt from real property taxes.
IN LIGHT OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The
respondent Quezon City Assessor is hereby DIRECTED to determine, after due
hearing, the precise portions of the land and the area thereof which are leased to
private persons, and to compute the real property taxes due thereon as provided for
by law.
SO ORDERED.

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