37
Case List – Remedies under the NIRC CIR v. Sony Philippines, Inc., G.R. No. 178697, November 17, 2010 Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation v. CIR , G.R. No. 172598, December 21, 2007 CIR v. Menguito, G.R. No. 167560, September 17, 2008 CIR v. Metro Star Superama, Inc., G.R. No. 185371, December 8, 2010 CIR v. Pascor Realty and Development Corporation, et al., , June 29, 1999 CIR v. Hantex Trading Co., Inc., G.R. No. 136975, March 31, 2005 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Services v. CIR, CTA Case No. 6608, October 20, 2009 CIR v. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd., G.R. No. L-19727, May 20, 1965 CIR v. GJM Philippines Manufacturing Inc., CTA En Banc Case No. 637, March 6, 2012 CIR v. BF Goodrich Philippines, Inc., et al., G.R. No. 1041771, February 24, 1999 Philippine Journalists, Inc. v. CIR , G.R. No. 162852, December 15, 2004 CIR v. FMF Development Corporation, G.R. No. 167765, June 30, 2008 CIR v. Kudos Metal Corporation, G.R. No. 178087, May 5, 2010 National Marketing Corporation (NAMARCO) v. Tecson, G.R. No. L-29131, August 27, 1969 CIR v. Primetown Property Group, Inc., G.R. No. 162155, August 28, 2007 Adamson, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., G.R. Nos. 120935 and 124557, May 21, 2009 BPI v. CIR , G.R. No. 139736, October 17, 2005 CIR v. Isabela Cultural Corporation, G.R. No. 135210, July 11, 2011 Advertising Associates, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 59758, December 26, 1984 Yabes, et al. v. Flojo, et al., G.R. No. L-46954, July 20, 1982 Fishwealth Canning Corporation v. CIR , G.R. No. 179343, January 21, 2010 Lascona Land Co., Inc. v. CIR, et al., G.R. No. 171251, March 5, 2012 Allied Banking Corporation v. Parayno, CTA Case No. 6565, November 3, 2004 Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation v. CIR, G.R. No. 168498, April 24, 2007 La Flor Dela Isabela, Inc. v. CIR, CTA En Banc No. 672, February 2, 2012 Oceanic Wireless Network, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. No. 148380, December 9, 2005 CIR v. Philamlife, G.R. No. 105208, May 29, 1995 CIR v. Tokyo Shipping, G.R. No. 68252, May 25, 1995 CIR v. Manila Electric Company, Inc., CTA En Banc No. 773, May 8, 2012 CIR v. PNB, G.R. No. 161997, October 25, 2005 CIR v. TMX Sales, Inc., G.R. No. 83736, January 15, 1992 ACCRA Investments Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 96322, December 20, 1991 Citibank N.A. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107434, October 10, 1997 CIR v. Palanca, G.R. No. L-16626, October 29, 1966 CIR v. Philippine American Life Insurance Co., et al., G.R. No. 105208, May 29, 1995 Gibbs v. Collector of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. L-13453, February 29, 1960 CIR v. Splash Corporation, CTA En Banc No. 330, May 5, 2008 Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corporation v. CIR , G.R. Nos. 141104 & 148763, June 8, 2007 CIR v. Mirant Pagbilao Corporation, G.R. No. 172129, September 12, 2008 CIR v. Aichi Forging Company of Asia, Inc., G.R. No. 184823, October 6, 2010 Calamba Steel Center, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. No. 151857, April 28, 2005 Philam Asset Management, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. Nos. 156637 and 162004, December 14, 2005 Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. V. CIR, G.R. No. 166482, January 25, 2012 CIR v. Mirant Philippines Operations Corporation, , June 15, 2011 1

Remedies Under the NIRC

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

tax

Citation preview

Page 1: Remedies Under the NIRC

Case List – Remedies under the NIRC

CIR v. Sony Philippines, Inc., G.R. No. 178697, November 17, 2010 Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation v. CIR , G.R. No. 172598, December 21, 2007 CIR v. Menguito, G.R. No. 167560, September 17, 2008 CIR v. Metro Star Superama, Inc., G.R. No. 185371, December 8, 2010 CIR v. Pascor Realty and Development Corporation, et al., , June 29, 1999 CIR v. Hantex Trading Co., Inc., G.R. No. 136975, March 31, 2005 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Services v. CIR, CTA Case No. 6608, October 20, 2009 CIR v. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd., G.R. No. L-19727, May 20, 1965 CIR v. GJM Philippines Manufacturing Inc., CTA En Banc Case No. 637, March 6, 2012 CIR v. BF Goodrich Philippines, Inc., et al., G.R. No. 1041771, February 24, 1999 Philippine Journalists, Inc. v. CIR , G.R. No. 162852, December 15, 2004 CIR v. FMF Development Corporation, G.R. No. 167765, June 30, 2008 CIR v. Kudos Metal Corporation, G.R. No. 178087, May 5, 2010 National Marketing Corporation (NAMARCO) v. Tecson, G.R. No. L-29131, August 27, 1969 CIR v. Primetown Property Group, Inc., G.R. No. 162155, August 28, 2007 Adamson, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., G.R. Nos. 120935 and 124557, May 21, 2009 BPI v. CIR , G.R. No. 139736, October 17, 2005 CIR v. Isabela Cultural Corporation, G.R. No. 135210, July 11, 2011 Advertising Associates, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 59758, December 26, 1984 Yabes, et al. v. Flojo, et al., G.R. No. L-46954, July 20, 1982 Fishwealth Canning Corporation v. CIR , G.R. No. 179343, January 21, 2010 Lascona Land Co., Inc. v. CIR, et al., G.R. No. 171251, March 5, 2012 Allied Banking Corporation v. Parayno, CTA Case No. 6565, November 3, 2004 Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation v. CIR, G.R. No. 168498, April 24, 2007 La Flor Dela Isabela, Inc. v. CIR, CTA En Banc No. 672, February 2, 2012 Oceanic Wireless Network, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. No. 148380, December 9, 2005 CIR v. Philamlife, G.R. No. 105208, May 29, 1995 CIR v. Tokyo Shipping, G.R. No. 68252, May 25, 1995 CIR v. Manila Electric Company, Inc., CTA En Banc No. 773, May 8, 2012 CIR v. PNB, G.R. No. 161997, October 25, 2005 CIR v. TMX Sales, Inc., G.R. No. 83736, January 15, 1992 ACCRA Investments Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 96322, December 20, 1991 Citibank N.A. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107434, October 10, 1997 CIR v. Palanca, G.R. No. L-16626, October 29, 1966 CIR v. Philippine American Life Insurance Co., et al., G.R. No. 105208, May 29, 1995 Gibbs v. Collector of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. L-13453, February 29, 1960 CIR v. Splash Corporation, CTA En Banc No. 330, May 5, 2008 Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corporation v. CIR , G.R. Nos. 141104 & 148763, June 8,

2007 CIR v. Mirant Pagbilao Corporation, G.R. No. 172129, September 12, 2008 CIR v. Aichi Forging Company of Asia, Inc., G.R. No. 184823, October 6, 2010 Calamba Steel Center, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. No. 151857, April 28, 2005 Philam Asset Management, Inc. v. CIR, G.R. Nos. 156637 and 162004, December 14, 2005 Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. V. CIR, G.R. No. 166482, January 25, 2012 CIR v. Mirant Philippines Operations Corporation, , June 15, 2011

1

Page 2: Remedies Under the NIRC

CIR vs. Sony Philippines, Inc.

Facts: LOA was issued. The LOA issued by the BIR covered the period “1997 and unverified prior years.” However, the LOA was invalidated by a prior Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) en banc decision (CTA EB 90, July 5, 2007) because the taxpayer commenced business operations only on Oct. 1, 1997, indicating that the taxpayer was not yet operating during the period covered by the examination.On Dec. 6, 1999 CIR issued a preliminary assessment for 1997 deficiency taxes and penalties to Sony, which it protested.A petition for review was filed by Sony before the CTA, within 30 days after the lapse of the 180 days from the submission of the supporting documents to the CIR.CTA-1st Division disallowed the deficiency VAT assessment the subsidized advertising expense paid by Sony was duly covered by a VAT invoice resulted in an input VAT credit. However, for the EWT, the deficiency assessment was upheld.CIR sought reconsideration on the ground that Sony should be liable for the deficiency VAT. It contends that Sony’s advertising expense cannot be considered as an input VAT credit because the same was eventually reimbursed by Sony International Singapore (SIS). As a result, Sony is not entitled to a tax credit and that the said advertising expense should be for the account of SIS.

ISSUE: 1. W/N the source of the payment of tax is relevant to determine 2. WON the assessment is valid

Ruling: 1. NO. Sony’s deficiency VAT assessment derived from the CIR’s allowance of the input VAT credits that should have been realized from advertising expense of the latter.Under Sec. 110 of the 1997 Tax Code, an advertising expense duly covered by a VAT invoice is a legitimate business expense. It cannot be denied that Sony incurred advertising expense. CIR’s own witness Aluquin even testified that advertising companies issued invoices in the name of Sony and the latter paid for the same. Hence, Sony incurred and paid for advertising expense services. Where the money came from is another matter all together.Before any VAT is levied, there must be sale, barter or exchange of goods or property. In this case, there was no sale, barter, exchange in the subsidy given by SIS to Sony. It was but a dole out and not in payment for the goods or properties sold, bartered or exchanged by Sony.

2. The revenue examiner went beyond the authority conferred by LOA. A LOA authorizes or empowers a designated revenue officer to examine, verify and scrutinize a taxpayer’s books and records in relation to his internal revenue tax liability for a particular period. The LOA, the examiners were authorize to examine Sony’s book of accounts and other accounting records for the period “1997 and unverified prior years.” However, CIR’s basis for deficiency vat for 1997was 1998. They acted without authority in arriving at the deficiency vat assessment. It should be considered without orce and effect – a nullity.Furthermore, the period “1997 and unverified prior years” violates Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 43-90, which states that a LOA should cover a taxable period not exceeding one taxable year. It also prohibits the issuance of LOAs covering the audit of “unverified prior years.” Hence, the SC held that the deficiency assessment against the taxpayer was canceled.

-------------PILIPINAS SHELL vs. CIR

Facts:FIRST ASSESSMENTPetitioner Pilipinas Shell, a Philippine subsidiary of the international petroleum giant Shell, and is engaged in the importation, refining and sale of petroleum products in the country. It was granted Tax Credit Certificates (TCC) by the Dept. of Finance by the Duty Drawback Center (Center in brevity). Pilipinas Shell used the TCCs in payment of some of its excise tax liabilities.  On April 22, 1998, the BIR sent a collection letter[4]  to Pilipinas Shell for alleged deficiency excise tax liabilities of PhP 1,705,028,008.06 for the taxable years 1992 and 1994 to 1997, inclusive of

delinquency surcharges and interest.  As basis for the collection letter, the BIR alleged that Pilipinas Shell is not a qualified transferee of the TCCs it acquired from other BOI-registered companies.  Pilipinas Shell protested the collection letter, but the protest was denied by the BIR. Pilipinas Shell filed its motion for reconsideration. However, due to respondent’s inaction on the motion, Pilipinas Shell filed a petition for review before the CTA.CTA ruled that the use by Pilipinas Shell of the TCCs was legal and valid, and that respondent’s attempt to collect alleged delinquent taxes and penalties from Pilipinas Shell without an assessment constitutes denial of due process. Respondent elevated the case to the CA – still pending to date.SECOND ASSESSMENT: THIS IS WHAT IS IMPORTANT!Despite the pendency the above case, the Center sent several letters (3 letters) to Pilipinas Shell, which required them to submit copies of pertinent sales invoices and delivery receipts covering sale transactions of their products to the TCC assignors/transferors purportedly in connection with an ongoing post audit, ANDrequired submission of the same documents covering Pilipinas Shell Industrial Fuel Oil (IFO) deliveries to Spintex International, Inc AND FINALLY requesting a list of the serial numbers of the TCCs assigned or transferred to it by various BOI-registered companies, either assignors or transferors.In reply Pilipinas Shell emphasized that the required submission of these documents had no legal basis. For non-compliance, the Center informed Pilipinas Shell of the cancellation of the first batch of TCCs transferred to them.  Pilipinas Shell motion for reconsideration was not acted upon.On November 22, 1999, Pilipinas Shell received the November 15, 1999 assessment letter[12]  from respondent for excise tax deficiencies, surcharges, and interest based on the first batch of cancelled TCCs. All these cancelled TCCs were also part of the subject matter in pending case. Pilipinas Shell protested[13]  the assessment letter, but the protest was denied by the BIR, constraining it to file another petition for review[14]  before the CTA, docketed as CTA Case No. 6003.By virtue of RA 9282 (act which expanded the jurisdiction of CTA), CTA Division granted the petition for review holding that respondent failed to prove with convincing evidence that the TCCs transferred to Pilipinas Shell were fraudulently issued as respondent’s finding of alleged fraud was merely speculative.Respondent filed his MR of the above decision which was rejected. Appealed the above decision before the CTA En Banc. En Banc resolved respondent’s appeal by holding that Pilipinas Shell was liable to pay the alleged excise tax deficiencies arising from the cancellation of the TCCs.Thus, PSPC filed this petition.

ISSUE:WHETHER OR NOT THE ASSESSMENT DATED 15 NOVEMBER 1999 IS VOID CONSIDERING THAT IT FAILED TO COMPLY WITH THE STATUTORY AS WELL AS REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS IN THE ISSUANCE OF ASSESSMENTS? YES.Pilipinas Shell avers that its statutory and procedural right to due process was violated by respondent in the issuance of the assessment. It claims that respondent violated RR 12-99 since no pre-assessment notice was issued to PSPC before the November 15, 1999 assessment.  Moreover, PSPC argues that the November 15, 1999 assessment effectively deprived it of its statutory right to protest the pre-assessment within 30 days from receipt of the disputed assessment letter.

HELD: While this has likewise been mooted by our discussion above, it would not be amiss to state that Pilipinas Shells rights to substantive and procedural due process have indeed been violated.  The facts show that PSPC was not accorded due process before the assessment was levied on it.  The Center required Pilipinas Shell to submit certain sales documents relative to supposed delivery of IFOs by PSPC to the TCC transferors.  PSPC contends that it could not submit these documents as the transfer of the subject TCCs did not require that it be a supplier of materials and/or component supplies to the transferors in a letter dated October 29, 1999 which was received by the Center on November 3, 1999.  On the same day, the Center informed Pilipinas Shell of the cancellation of the subject TCCs.  The objections of Pilipinas Shell were brushed aside by the Center and the assessment was issued by respondent on November 15, 1999, without following the statutory and procedural requirements clearly provided under the NIRC and applicable regulations. What is applicable is RR 12-99, which superseded RR 12-85, pursuant to Sec. 244 in relation to Sec. 245 of the NIRC implementing Secs. 6, 7, 204, 228, 247, 248, and 249 on the assessment of national internal revenue taxes, fees, and charges.  The procedures delineated in the said statutory provisos and RR 12-99 were not followed by respondent, depriving Pilipinas Shell of due process in contesting the formal assessment levied against it.  Respondent ignored RR 12-99 and did not issue Pilipinas Shell a notice for

2

Page 3: Remedies Under the NIRC

informal conference[44]  and a preliminary assessment notice, as required.[45]   Pilipinas Shells November 4, 1999 motion for reconsideration of the purported Center findings and cancellation of the subject TCCs and the TDM was not even acted upon.Pilipinas Shell was merely informed that it is liable for the amount of excise taxes it declared in its excise tax returns for 1992 and 1994 to 1997 covered by the subject TCCs via the formal letter of demand and assessment notice.   For being formally defective, the November 15, 1999 formal letter of demand and assessment notice is void.  Paragraph 3.1.4 of Sec. 3, RR 12-99 pertinently provides:

 3.1.4  Formal Letter of Demand and Assessment Notice.––The formal letter of

demand and assessment notice shall be issued by the Commissioner or his duly authorized representative.  The letter of demand calling for payment of the taxpayer’s deficiency tax or taxes shall state the facts, the law, rules and regulations, or jurisprudence on which the assessment is based, otherwise, the formal letter of demand and assessment notice shall be void.  The same shall be sent to the taxpayer only by registered mail or by personal delivery. x x x (Emphasis supplied.)

In short, respondent merely relied on the findings of the Center which did not givePilipinas Shell ample opportunity to air its side. While Pilipinas Shell indeed protested the formal assessment, such does not denigrate the fact that it was deprived of statutory and procedural due process to contest the assessment before it was issued.  Respondent must be more circumspect in the exercise of his functions, as this Court aptly held in Roxas v. Court of Tax Appeals:

 The power of taxation is sometimes called also the power to

destroy.  Therefore it should be exercised with caution to minimize injury to the proprietary rights of a taxpayer.  It must be exercised fairly, equally and uniformly, lest the tax collector kill the “hen that lays the golden egg.” And, in the order to maintain the general public’s trust and confidence in the Government this power must be used justly and not treacherously.

--------------------

CIR V. DOMINADOR MENGUITO SEPTEMBER 17, 2008

Facts:Respondent is married to Jeanne Menguito and is engaged in the restaurant and/or cafeteria business. The spouses owned Copper Kettle Cafeteria Specialist ( hereinafter “CKCS” ) located at Kalayaan Bar, Departure Area, Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Pasay City. They are also the owners of a business named Copper Kettle Catering Services, Inc ( hereinafter “CKCS, Inc.”) located at Club John Hay, Baguio City with which Texas Instruments Phil., Inc. and Club John Hay had a contract. Subsequently, BIR Baguio received information that respondent has undeclared income from Texas Instruments Phil., Inc. and Club John Hay. On September 2, 1997, after due investigation, the BIR issued assessment notices stating therein that there is due from respondent deficiency income and percentage tax covering the years 1991,1992 and 1993. Ms. Jeane Menguito protested the assessments. Respondent thereafter filed the present case praying for the cancellation and withdrawal of the deficiency income tax and percentage tax assessments. The Court of Tax Appeals ordered respondent to pay the CIR the deficiency income, percentage taxes and delinquency interest. However the Court of Appeals reversed the decision.

Issues:1. Whether or not CKCS, Inc. and CKCS are one and the same taxable entity with the same tax base and liability.2. WON there was a valid formal assessment notice.

Ruling:1. CKCS, Inc. and CKCS are one and the same taxable entity with the same tax base and liability. The Court considers the presence of the following circumstances to wit; when the owner of one directs and controls the operations of the other, and the payments effected or received by one are for the accounts due from or payable to the other, or when the properties or products of one are all sold to the other,

which in turn immediately sells them to the public as substantial evidence in support of the finding that the two are actually one juridical taxable personality. All the circumstances are present in this case.The Supreme Court held that based on evidence presented, respondent’s CKCS is also known and referred to as CKCS, Inc. Moreover, respondent and his wife own, manage and act as proprietors of CKCS, and that through said business, respondent also had taxable transactions with Texas Instruments Phil., Inc. and Club John Hay. CKCS and CKCS, Inc. are merely employing the fiction of their separate corporate existence to evade payment of proper taxes.2. If taxpayer denies ever having received an assessment from BIR, it’s incumbent upon the latter to prove by competent evidence that notice was received by addressee. Since respondent hasn’t adduced sufficient evidence that petitioner had in fact received pre-assessment notice & post-reporting notice required by law, it can’t be assumed that petitioner had been served said notices.It should be emphasized that the stringent requirement that an assessment notice be satisfactorily proven to have been issued and released or, if receipt thereof is denied, that said assessment notice have been served on the taxpayer, applies only to formal assessments prescribed under Section 228 of the National Internal Revenue Code, but not to post-reporting notices or pre-assessment notices. The issuance of a valid formal assessment is a substantive prerequisite to tax collection, for it contains not only a computation of tax liabilities but also a demand for payment within a prescribed period, thereby signaling the time when penalties and interests begin to accrue against the taxpayer and enabling the latter to determine his remedies therefor. Due process requires that it must be served on and received by the taxpayer. A post-reporting notice and pre-assessment notice do not bear the gravity of a formal assessment notice. The post-reporting notice and pre-assessment notice merely hint at the initial findings of the BIR against a taxpayer and invites the latter to an "informal" conference or clarificatory meeting. Neither notice contains a declaration of the tax liability of the taxpayer or a demand for payment thereof. Hence, the lack of such notices inflicts no prejudice on the taxpayer for as long as the latter is properly served a formal assessment notice.------------------

CIR v. Metro Star Superama, Inc., G.R. No. 185371, December 8, 2010

On January 26, 2001, the Regional Director of Revenue of Legazpi City, issued letter of Authority to examine Metro Stars books of accounts and other accounting records for income tax and other internal revenue taxes for the taxable year 1999.For Metro Stars failure to comply with several requests for the presentation of records and Subpoena Duces Tecum, BIR of Legazpi City proceeded with the investigation based on the best evidence obtainable preparatory to the issuance of assessment notice.On April 11, 2002, Metro Star received a Formal Letter of Demand dated April 3, 2002 from Revenue District No. 67, Legazpi City, assessing petitioner the amount of P292,874.16.) for deficiency value-added and withholding taxes for the taxable year 1999. Subsequently, Revenue District Office No. 67 sent a copy of the Final Notice of Seizure dated May 12, 2003, which petitioner received on May 15, 2003, giving the latter last opportunity to settle its deficiency tax liabilities within ten (10) [days] from receipt thereof, otherwise respondent BIR shall be constrained to serve and execute the Warrants of Distraint and/or Levy and Garnishment to enforce collection.On February 6, 2004, petitioner received from Revenue District Office No. 67 a Warrant of Distraint and/or Levy No. 67-0029-23 dated May 12, 2003 demanding payment of deficiency value-added tax and withholding tax payment in the amount of P292,874.16.On July 30, 2004, petitioner filed with the Office of respondent Commissioner a Motion for Reconsideration pursuant to Section 3.1.5 of Revenue Regulations No. 12-99.On February 8, 2005, respondent Commissioner, through its authorized representative, Revenue Regional Director of Revenue Region 10, Legaspi City, issued a Decision denying petitioner’s Motion for Reconsideration. Petitioner, through counsel received said Decision on February 18, 2005.Denying that it received a Preliminary Assessment Notice (PAN) and  claiming that it was not accorded due process, Metro Star filed a petition for review[4]  with the CTA.The CTA-Second Division found merit in the petition of Metro Star and, on March 21, 2007, rendered a decision, granting the petition and ordering CIR from collecting the subject taxes. It opined that  “[w]hile there [is] a disputable presumption that a mailed letter [is] deemed received by the addressee in the ordinary course of mail, a direct denial of the receipt of mail shifts the burden upon the party favored by the presumption to prove that the mailed letter was indeed received by the addressee.” [5]  It also found that there was no clear showing that Metro Star actually received the alleged PAN, dated January 16,

3

Page 4: Remedies Under the NIRC

2002. It, accordingly, ruled that the Formal Letter of Demand dated April 3, 2002, as well as the Warrant of Distraint and/or Levy dated May 12, 2003 were void, as Metro Star was denied due process.[6] 

The CIR sought reconsideration[7]  but the motion was denied. CIR filed a petition for review [9]  with the CTA-En Banc, but the petition was dismissed after a determination that no new matters were raised. The motion for reconsideration[10]  filed by the CIR was likewise denied by the CTA-En Banc in its November 18, 2008Resolution.[11] 

Hence this petition.

ISSUES & HELD:1. Whether or not Metro Star was denied due process? YES.

The Court agrees with the CTA that the CIR failed to discharge its duty and present any evidence to show that Metro Star indeed received the PAN dated January 16, 2002. It could have simply presented the registry receipt or the certification from the postmaster that it mailed the PAN, but failed. Neither did it offer any explanation on why it failed to comply with the requirement of service of the PAN. It merely accepted the letter of Metro Star’s chairman dated April 29, 2002, that stated that he had received theFAN dated April 3, 2002, but not the PAN; that he was willing to pay the tax as computed by the CIR; and that he just wanted to clarify some matters with the hope of lessening its tax liability.

2. Is the failure to strictly comply with notice requirements tantamount to a denial of due process?Section 228 of the Tax Code clearly requires that the taxpayer must first be informed that he is

liable for deficiency taxes through the sending of a PAN. He must be informed of the facts and the law upon which the assessment is made. The law imposes a substantive, not merely a formal, requirement. To proceed heedlessly with tax collection without first establishing a valid assessment is evidently violative of the cardinal principle in administrative investigations - that taxpayers should be able to present their case and adduce supporting evidence.[14] 

It is clear that the sending of a PAN to taxpayer to inform him of the assessment made is but part of the “due process requirement in the issuance of a deficiency tax assessment,” the absence of which renders nugatory any assessment made by the tax authorities. The use of the word “shall” in subsection 3.1.2describes the mandatory nature of the service of a PAN. The persuasiveness of the right to due process reaches both substantial and procedural rights and the failure of the CIR to strictly comply with the requirements laid down by law and its own rules is a denial of Metro Star’s right to due process.[15] Thus, for its failure to send the PAN stating the facts and the law on which the assessment was made as required by Section 228 of R.A. No. 8424, the assessment made by the CIR is void.

The case of CIR v. Menguito[16]  cited by the CIR in support of its argument that only the non-service of the FAN is fatal to the validity of an assessment, cannot apply to this case because the issue therein was the non-compliance with the provisions of R. R. No. 12-85 which sought to interpret Section 229 of the old tax law. RA No. 8424 has already amended the provision of Section 229 on protesting an assessment. The old requirement of merely notifying the taxpayer of the CIR’s findings was changed in 1998 to informing the taxpayer of not only the law, but also of the facts on which an assessment would be made. Otherwise, the assessment itself would be invalid.[17]  The regulation then, on the other hand, simply provided that a notice be sent to the respondent in the form prescribed, and that no consequence would ensue for failure to comply with that form.

The Court need not belabor to discuss the matter of Metro Star’s failure to file its protest, for it is well-settled that a void assessment bears no fruit.---------------------

CIR V PASCOR REALTYG.R 128315June 29, 1999

Facts:  The CIR authorized certain BIR officers to examine the books of accounts and other accounting records of Pascor Realty and Development Corp. (PRDC) for 1986, 1987 and 1988. The examination resulted in recommendation for the issuance of an assessment of P7,498,434.65 and P3,015,236.35 for 1986 and 1987, respectively.

On March 1, 1995, Commissioner filed a criminal complaint for tax evasion against PRDC, its president and treasurer before the DOJ. Private respondents filed immediately an urgent request for reconsideration on reinvestigation disputing the tax assessment and tax liability.

On March 23, 1995, private respondents received a subpoena from the DOJ in connection with the criminal complaint. In a letter dated, May 17, 1995, the Commissioner denied private respondent’s request for reconsideration (reinvestigation on the ground that no formal assessment has been issued which the latter elevated to the CTA on a petition for review. The Commissioner’s motion to dismiss on the ground of the CTA’s lack of jurisdiction inasmuch as no formal assessment was issued against private respondent was denied by CTA and ordered the Commissioner to file an answer but did not instead filed a petition with the CA alleging grave abuse of discretion and lack of jurisdiction on the part of CTA for considering the affidavit/report of the revenue officers and the endorsement of said report as assessment which may be appealed to he CTA. The CA sustained the CTA decision and dismissed the petition.

Issues: 1. Whether or not the criminal complaint for tax evasion can be construed as an assessment.2. Whether or not an assessment is necessary before criminal chargesfor tax evasion may be instituted.

Held: The filing of the criminal complaint with the DOJ cannot be construed as a formal assessment. Neither the Tax Code nor the revenue regulations governing the protest assessments provide a specific definition or form of an assessment.An assessment must be sent to and received by the taxpayer, and must demand payment of the taxes described therein within a specific period. The revenue officer’s affidavit merely contained a computation of respondent’s tax liability. It did not state a demand or period for payment. It was addressed to the Secretary of Justice not to the taxpayer. They joint affidavit was meant to support the criminal complaint for tax evasion; it was not meant to be a notice of tax due and a demand to private respondents for the payment thereof. The fact that the complaint was sent to the DOJ, and not to private respondent, shows that commissioner intended to file a criminal complaint for tax evasion, not to issue an assessment.

An assessment is not necessary before criminal charges can be filed. Acriminal charge need not only be supported by a prima facie showing of failure to file a required return. The CIR had, in such tax evasioncases, discretion on whether to issue an assessment, or to file a criminal case against the taxpayer, or to do both.----------------------------

CIR vs. HANTEX TRADING CO., INC.  G.R. No. 136975; March 31, 2005

Facts: Hantex Trading Co is a company organized under the Philippines. It is engaged in the sale of plastic products, it imports synthetic resin and other chemicals for the manufacture of its products. For this purpose, it is required to file an Import Entry and Internal Revenue Declaration (Consumption Entry) with the Bureau of Customs under Section 1301 of the Tariff and Customs Code. Sometime in October 1989, Lt. Vicente Amoto, Acting Chief of Counter-Intelligence Division of the Economic Intelligence and Investigation Bureau (EIIB), received confidential information that the respondent had imported synthetic resin amounting to P115,599,018.00 but only declared P45,538,694.57. Thus, Hentex receive a subpoena to present its books of account which it failed to do. The bureau cannot find any original copies of the products Hentex imported since the originals were eaten by termites. Thus, the Bureau relied on the certified copies of the respondent’s Profit and Loss Statement for 1987 and 1988 on file with the SEC, the machine copies of the Consumption Entries, Series of 1987, submitted by the informer, as well as excerpts from the entries certified by Tomas and Danganan. The case was submitted to the CTA which ruled that Hentex have tax deficiency and is ordered to pay, per investigation of the Bureau. The CA ruled that the income and sales tax deficiency assessments issued by the petitioner were unlawful and baseless since the copies of the import entries relied upon in computing the deficiency tax of the respondent were not duly authenticated by the public officer charged with their custody, nor verified under oath by the EIIB and the BIR investigators.

Issue: Whether or not the final assessment of the petitioner against the respondent for deficiency income tax and sales tax for the latter’s 1987 importation of resins and calcium bicarbonate is based on competent evidence and the law.

Held: Central to the second issue is Section 16 of the NIRC of 1977, as amended which provides that the CIR has the power to make assessments and prescribe additional requirements for tax administration and enforcement. Among such powers are those provided in paragraph (b), which provides that “Failure to submit required returns, statements, reports and other documents. – When a report required by law as a

4

Page 5: Remedies Under the NIRC

basis for the assessment of any national internal revenue tax shall not be forthcoming within the time fixed by law or regulation or when there is reason to believe that any such report is false, incomplete or erroneous, the Commissioner shall assess the proper tax on the best evidence obtainable.” This provision applies when the CIR undertakes to perform her administrative duty of assessing the proper tax against a taxpayer, to make a return in case of a taxpayer’s failure to file one, or to amend a return already filed in the BIR. The “best evidence” envisaged in Section 16 of the 1977 NIRC, as amended, includes the corporate and accounting records of the taxpayer who is the subject of the assessment process, the accounting records of other taxpayers engaged in the same line of business, including their gross profit and net profit sales. Such evidence also includes data, record, paper, document or any evidence gathered by internal revenue officers from other taxpayers who had personal transactions or from whom the subject taxpayer received any income; and record, data, document and information secured from government offices or agencies, such as the SEC, the Central Bank of the Philippines, the Bureau of Customs, and the Tariff and Customs Commission. However, the best evidence obtainable under Section 16 of the 1977 NIRC, as amended, does not include mere photocopies of records/documents. The petitioner, in making a preliminary and final tax deficiency assessment against a taxpayer, cannot anchor the said assessment on mere machine copies of records/documents. Mere photocopies of the Consumption Entries have no probative weight if offered as proof of the contents thereof. The reason for this is that such copies are mere scraps of paper and are of no probative value as basis for any deficiency income or business taxes against a taxpayer.Companies exempt from zero-rate tax------------------

Magnetic Resonance Imaging Services v. CIR ,CTA Case No. 6608, October 20, 2009.

The petitioner in the case argued that the assessment issued against it lacks factual and legal bases for the reason that it is based merely on a tentative income-tax return, as the revenue examiner supposedly totally disregarded the amended return that the company filed in making the assessment. According to the taxpayer, this should not have been the case since the amendment of the return has no adverse impact on the company’s tax liability.In effect, the taxpayer is asserting that since it was able to amend the tentative income tax return that it previously filed, prior to the expiration of the three-year period prescribed under the law and the issuance of the applicable Letter of Authority, the BIR should have disregarded the same and instead, should have limited its investigation on the amended return subsequently filed by the company.

Nonetheless, the CTA Second Division ruled that the BIR is not prevented from looking into the petitioner’s tentative return since under the Tax Code, in ascertaining the correctness of any return, or in making a return when none has been made, or in determining the liability of any person for any internal-revenue tax, or in collecting any such liability, or in evaluating tax compliance, the commissioner is authorized to examine any book, paper, record or other data which may be relevant or material to such inquiry. The court further said that “once a return has been filed, or even when a return has not been filed, the commissioner is empowered to authorize the examination of any taxpayer to determine whether or not the latter is liable for any unpaid or deficiency internal revenue taxes.”

In conducting the examination, respondent or his duly authorized representative is given much latitude as to what documents may be examined considering that the law allows him or his authorized representative to look into “any book, paper, record or other data” which may be relevant to ascertain the correctness of the return filed. Moreover, in view of the provisions of the Tax Code which provides that “(a)ny return, statement or declaration filed in any office authorized to receive the same shall not be withdrawn,” the court held that “once a return has been filed, the commissioner or his duly authorized representative is not precluded from examining the correctness of any return filed at their office” for the reason that the term “any return” is indicative that atentative return is likewise included. Surely, the abovementioned pronouncements of the CTA Second Division must serve as a caution to taxpayers who haphazardly file a tentative return just to beat the deadline and rely on the idea of filing an amended return.

Therefore, the best safeguard of taxpayers against tax assessments is still themaintenance of efficient and organized books of accounts and records, and of course,not to rely on presumptions.-----------------

CIR v. GJM Philippines Manufacturing Inc.

Facts:Petitioner is a corporation, duly organized and existing under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines, and also duly registered as a Philippine Export Zone Authority (PEZA) investor/locator.On April 12, 2000, petitioner filed its Annual Income Tax Return for taxable year 1999. Sometime in 2001, Warnaco (HK) Ltd., then petitioner's parent company, underwent bankruptcy proceedings, andthis resulted in the conveyance of ownership of petitioner and its global affiliates to Luen Thai Overseas Limited in December 2001. Thereafter, the present owner set in place streamlining efforts, among which was the transfer of petitioner's Makati Office to the facilities in Rosario, Cavite.On October 18, 2002, the BIR, through Revenue District Officer Ner Alfredo B. Plana, sent a letter of informal conference dated October 14, 2002, by facsimile transfer, informing petitioner that the report of investigation on its income and business tax liabilities for the calendar year ended December 31, 1999 had been submitted. The report reveals that petitioner is still liable for an income tax deficiency and corresponding 20% interest as well as compromise penalty in the total amount of P1,192,541.51, from shipment/loading freights, fringe benefit taxes, etc. On February 12, 2003, respondent issued a Pre-Assessment Notice.On April 14, 2003, respondent issued the undated Assessment Notice No. IT-17316-99-03-282 against petitioner, indicating a deficiency income tax assessment in the amount of P1,480,099.29. On August 18, 2003, respondent issued a Final Notice Before Seizure addressed to petitioner informing the latter that it was being given a last opportunity to make the necessary settlement of the same deficiency income tax for taxable year 1999. Petitioner claims that although said notice indicated its new address at Phase 2 Lot 9 Blk. 4, PEZA, Rosario, Cavite, the same never reached it. On December 8, 2003, petitioner received a Warrant of Distraint and/or Levy from the BIR RDO [No.] 48-West Makati, which stemmed from Assessment/Demand No. IT-17316-99-03-282 on April 14, 2003, involving the amount of P1,480,099.29, as deficiency income tax for taxable year 1999. Accompanying the said Warrant were the Preliminary Collection Letter dated July 25, 2003, and the Final Notice Before Seizure dated August 18, 2003.On January 7, 2004, petitioner filed its Letter Protest dated January 6, 2004 against the said Warrant of Distraint and/ or Levy dated November 27, 2003. And on January 26, 2004, petitioner receivedrespondent's letter dated January 15, 2003, supposedly constituting the respondent's final decision on the disputed assessment, denying petitioner's protest for lack of factual and legal bases.The Ruling of the Court in Division: FAN and Warrant is CANCELLED andWITHDRAWN.

Issue: WON THE FORMAL ASSESSMENT NOTICE (FAN) FOR DEFICIENCY INCOME TAX FOR TAXABLE YEAR 1999 HAD BEEN RELEASED, MAILED OR SENT TO HEREIN RESPONDENT WITHIN THE 3-YEAR PRESCRIPTIVE PERIOD UNDER SECTION 203 OF THE NIRC OF 1997.

HELD:The three (3)-year period within which the CIR can validly issue an assessment is reckoned from:

(a) the last day required by law for filing the final adjustment return, i.e., on or before the fifteenth (15th) day of April, or on or before the fifteenth (15th) day of the fourth (4th) month following the close of the fiscal year, as the case may be; or (b) the date of actual filing of the return, whichever is later.

Based on the records of the case, GJM filed its Annual Income Tax Return for the taxable year 1999 on April 12, 2000, consequently, the three (3)-year period within which the CIR can validly issue assessment is until April 15, 2003. And records show that the FAN, with attached Details of Discrepancies, was released, mailed and sent through registered mail on April 14, 2003. Apparently, the FAN was made within the period provided under Section 203 of the 1997 NIRC, as amended. The settled rule in our jurisprudence is that when mail matter is sent by registered mail, there may exist a presumption, set forth under Section 2(v), Rule 131 of the Rules of Court, that it was received in the regular course of mail. The facts to be proved in order to raise this presumption are: (a) that the letter was properly addressed with postage prepaid; and (b) that it was mailed. Once these facts are proved, the presumption is that the letter was received by the addressee as soon as it could have been transmitted to him in the ordinary course of the mails. While respondent avers that it sent through registered mail the subject assessment notice on April 14, 2003, within the three (3)-year

5

Page 6: Remedies Under the NIRC

prescriptive period, petitioner denies having received the said assessment notice from respondent. Petitioner alleges (i) that it came to know of the deficiency income tax assessment only on December 8, 2003 when it was served with the Warrant of Distraint and/ or Levy; and (ii) that it was able to receive the Formal Assessment Notice and the Details of Discrepancies on January 26, 2004, when the same documents were attached to respondent's letter dated January 15, 2004. Therefore, considering that petitioner denies receipt of the said mail, it behooves upon respondent to prove that it was indeed received by petitioner.

The failure of the respondent to prove receipt of the assessment by the Petitioner leads to the conclusion that no assessment was issued. Consequently, the government's right to issue an assessment for the said period has already prescribed.To prove that the subject mail was served upon petitioner, respondent offered in evidence the Transmittal Letter No. 282 dated April 14, 2003 duly prepared and signed by Ms. Ma. Nieva A. Guerrero, as Chief of the Assessment Division of BIR Revenue Region No. 8-Makati. Notably however, respondent did not present Ma. Nieva A. Guerrero to testify on the said Transmittal Letter dated April 14, 2003 which she supposedly prepared and signed, considering that petitioner has denied having received the subject Formal Assessment Notice and the Details of Discrepancies. Furthermore, independent evidence, such as the registry receipt of the assessment notice, or a certification from the Bureau of Posts, could have easily been obtained, and offered before this Court, yet respondent failed to do so. Thus, for failure of respondent to establish that Formal Assessment Notice No. IT-17316-99-03-282 had been released, mailed or sent within the three (3)-year prescriptive period under Section 203 of the NIRC of 1997, the right of the Government to assess the subject tax has prescribed

CIR v. Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd

Facts: Phoenix Assurance Co. Ltd., a foreign insurance corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain, is licensed to do business in the Philippines with head office in London. Through its head office it entered, in London, into worldwide reinsurance treaties with various foreign insurance companies. It agreed to cede a portion of premiums received on original insurances underwritten by its head office, subsidiaries, and branch offices throughout the world, in consideration for assumption by the foreign insurance companies of an equivalent portion of the liability from such original insurances. Pursuant to such reinsurance treaties,Phoenix Assurance Co., Ltd. ceded portions of the premiums it earned from its underwriting business in the Philippines (1952, P316,526.75; 1953, P246,082.04; 1954, P203,384.69) upon which the CIR , by letter of 6 May 1958, assessed withholding tax totaling P183,838.42 (1952, P75,966.42; 1953, 59,059.68; 1954, 48,812.32). On 1 April 1951, Phoenix Assurance filed its Philippine income tax return for 1950, claiming therein, among others, a deduction of P37,147.04 as net addition to marine insurance reserve equivalent to 40% of the gross marine insurance premiums received during the year. The Commissioner disallowed P11,772.57 of such claim for deduction and subsequently assessed against Phoenix Assurance the sum of P1,884.00 as deficiency income tax. The disallowance resulted from the fixing by the Commissioner of the net addition to the marine insurance reserve at 100% of the marine insurance premiums received during the last three months of the year. The Commissioner assumed that “ninety and thirty days are approximately the length of time required before shipments reach their destination or before claims are received by the insurance companies.” On 1 April 1953 Phoenix Assurance filed its Philippine income tax return for 1952, declaring therein a deduction from gross income of P35,912.25 as part of the head office expenses incurred for its Philippine business, computed at 5% on its gross Philippine income. On 30 August 1955 it amended its income tax return for 1952 by excluding from its gross income the amount of P316,526.75 representing reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers and further eliminating deductions corresponding to the ceded premiums. The amended return showed an income tax due in theamount of P2,502.00. The Commissioner disallowed P15,826.35 of the claimed deduction for head office expenses and assessed a deficiency tax of P5,667.00 on 24 July 1958. On 30 April 1954 Phoenix Assurance filed its Philippine income tax return for 1953 and claimed therein a deduction from gross income of P33,070.88 as head office expenses allocable to its Philippine business, equivalent to 5% of its gross Philippine income. On 30 August 1955 it amended its 1953 income tax return to exclude from its gross income the amount of P246,082.04 representing reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers. At the same time it requested the refund of P23,409.00 as overpaid income tax for 1953. To avoid the prescriptive period provided for in Section 306 of the Tax Code, it filed a petition for review on 11 August

1956 in the Court of Tax Appeals praying for such refund. After verification of the amended income tax return the Commissioner disallowed P12,304.10 of the deduction representing head office expenses allocable to Philippine business thereby reducing the refundable amount to P20,180.00. On 29 April 1955 Phoenix Assurance filed its Philippine income tax return for 1954 claiming therein, among others, a deduction from gross income of P29,624.75 as head office expenses allocable to its Philippine business, computed at 5% of its gross Philippine income. It also excluded from its gross income the amount of P203,384.69 representing reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers not doing business in the Philippines. On 1 August 1958 the Bureau of Internal Revenue released an assessment for deficiency income tax for the years 1952 and 1954 against Phoenix Assurance amounting to P2,847. The assessment resulted from the disallowance of a portion of the deduction claimed by Phoenix Assurance as head office expenses allocable to its business in the Philippines fixed by the Commissioner at 5% of the net Philippine income instead of 5% of the gross Philippine income as claimed in the returns. Phoenix Assurance protested against the assessments for withholding tax and deficiency income tax. However, the Commissioner denied such protest.Subsequently, Phoenix Assurance appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA Cases 305 and 543). In a decision dated 14 February 1962, the Court of Tax Appeals allowed in full the deduction claimed by Phoenix Assurance for 1950 as net addition to marine insurance reserve; determined the allowable head office expenses allocable to Philippine business to be 5% of the net income in the Philippines; declared the right of the Commissioner to assess deficiency income tax for 1952 to have prescribed; absolved Phoenix Assurance from payment of the statutory penalties for non-filing of withholding tax return. Thus, the court ordered Phoenix Assurance to pay the Commissioner the respective amounts of P75,966.42, P59,059.68 and P48,812.32, as withholding tax for the years 1952, 1953 and 1954, and P2,847.00 as income tax for 1954, or the total sum of P186,685.42 within 30 days from the date the decision becomes final. Upon the other hand, the Commissioner was ordered to refund to Phoenix Assurance the sum of P20,180.00 as overpaid income tax for 1953, which sum is to be deducted from the total sum of P186,685.42 due as taxes; and ordered further that if any amount of the tax is not paid within the time prescribed, there shall be collected a surcharge of 5%of the tax unpaid, plus interest at the rate of 1% a month from the date of delinquency to the date of payment, provided that the maximum amount that may be collected as interest shall not exceed the amount corresponding to a period of 3 years; without pronouncement as to costs. Both parties appealed to the Supreme Court.The Supreme Court modified the decision appealed from, and ordered Phoenix Assurance to pay the Commissioner the amount of P75,966.42, P59,059.68 and P48,812.32 as withholding tax for the years 1952, 1953 and 1954, respectively, and the sums of P5,667.00 and P2,847.00 as income tax for 1952 and 1954 or a total of P192,352.42; and ordered the Commissioner to refund to Phoenix Assurance the amount of P20,180.00 as overpaid income tax for 1953, which should be deducted from the amount of P192,352.42; and ordered further that if the amount of P192,352.42 or a portion thereof is not paid within 30 days from the datethe judgment becomes final, there shall be collected a surcharge and interest as provided for in Section 51 (e) (2) of the Tax Code. No costs. HELD:1. British Traders’ Insurance vs. CIR; Reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers not doing business in the Philippines pursuant to contracts executed abroad are income from sources within the Philippines subject to withholding tax The question of whether reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers not doing business in the Philippines pursuant to contracts executed abroad are income from sources within the Philippines subject to withholding tax under Section 53 and 54 of the Tax Code has already been resolved in the affirmative in British Traders’ Insurance Co. Ltd. vs. CIR , L-20501, 30 April 1965.

2. Section 331 of the Tax Code; Period of limitation upon assessment and collection Section 331 of the Tax Code, which limits the right of the CIR to assess income tax within five years from the filing of the income tax return, states: “Except as provided in the succeeding section, internal-revenue taxes shall be assessed within five years after the return was filed, and no proceeding in court without assessment for the collection of such taxes shall be begun after the expiration of such period. For the purposes of this section a return filed before the last day prescribed by law for the filing thereof shall be considered as filed on such last day: Provided, That this limitation shall not apply to cases already investigated prior to the approval of this Code.”

6

Page 7: Remedies Under the NIRC

3. Running of the prescriptive period commence from filing of original return The Court of Tax Appeals ruled that the original return was a complete return containing “information on various items of income and deduction from which respondent may intelligently compute and determine the tax liability of petitioner”, hence, the prescriptive period should be counted from the filing of said originalreturn; the view which the Supreme Court sustains. The object of the Tax Code is to impose taxes for the needs of the Government, not to enhance tax avoidance to its prejudice. To hold otherwise would pave the way for taxpayers to evade the payment of taxes by simply reporting in their original return heavy losses and amending the same more than five years later when the CIR has lost his authority to assess the proper tax thereunder.

4. Right of Commissioner to assess the deficiency tax has not prescribed Considering that the deficiency assessment was based on the amended return which, as aforestated, is substantially different from the original return, the period of limitation of the right to issue the same should be counted from the filing of the amended income tax return. From August 30, 1955, when the amended return was filed, to July 24, 1958, when the deficiency assessment was issued, less than five years elapsed. The right of the Commissioner to assess the deficiency tax on such amended return has not prescribed.

5. Section 32, paragraph (a) of the Tax Code Special provisions regarding income and deductions of insurance companies, whether domestic or foreign, Special deductions allowed to insurance companies Paragraph (a) of Section 32 of the Tax Code states “In the case of insurance companies, except domestic life insurance companies and foreign life insurance companies doing business in the Philippines, the net additions, if any, required by law to be made within the year to reserve funds and the sums other thandividends paid within the year on policy and annuity contracts may be deducted from their gross income: Provided, however, That the released reserve be treated as income for the year of release.”

6. Section 186 of the Insurance LawSection 186 of the Insurance Law requires the setting up of reserves for liability on marine insurance, thus “. . . Provided, That for marine risks the insuring company shall be required to charge as the liability for reinsurance fifty per centum of the premiums written in the policies upon yearly risks, and the full premiums written in the policies upon all other marine risks not terminated.”

7. Determination of the required reserve for marine insurance The reserve required for marine insurance is determined on two bases: 50% of premiums under policies on yearly risks and 100% of premiums under policies of marine risks not terminated during the year. Section 32 (a) of the Tax Code allows the full amount of such reserve to be deducted from gross income. In the present case, the formulas for determining the marine reserve employed by Phoenix Assurance and the Commissioner (40% of premiums received during the year and 100% of premiums received during the last three months of the year, respectively) do not comply with Section 186. Said determinations run short of the requirement. For purposes of the Insurance Law, the Court therefore cannot countenance the same. Phoenix Assurance’s claim for deduction of P37,147.04 being less than the amount required in Section 186 of the Insurance Law, the same cannot be and is not excessive, and should therefore be fully allowed.

8. Purpose of the reserve; What is prohibited by income tax law The reserve called for in Section 186 is a safeguard to the general public and should be strictly followed not only because it is an express provision but also as a matter of public policy. However, forincome tax purposes a taxpayer is free to deduct from its gross income a lesser amount, or not to claim any deduction at all. What is prohibited by the income tax law is to claim a deduction beyond the amount authorized therein. *

9. Items of income not belonging to the company’s Philippine business excluded from head office expenses allocable to Philippine Branch; Paragraph 2, subsection (a), Section 30 of the Tax Code The gross income of Phoenix Assurance consists of income from its Philippine business as well as reinsurance premiums received for its head office in London and reinsurance premiums ceded to foreign reinsurers. Since the items of income not belonging to its Philippine business are not taxable to its Philippine branch, they should be excluded in determining the head office expenses allocable to said Philippine branch. This conclusion finds support in paragraph 2, subsection (a), Section 30 of the Tax Code, which provides that “Expenses allowable to non-resident alien individuals and foreign corporations. — In the case of a non-resident alien individual or a foreign corporation, the expenses deductible are the necessary expenses

paid or incurred in carrying on any business or trade conducted within the Philippines exclusively.” Consequently, the deficiency assessments for 1952, 1953 and 1954, resulting from partial disallowance of deduction representing head office expenses, are sustained.

10. Interest on tax payment; Absolution based on equitable groundThe imposition of interest on unpaid taxes is one of the statutory penalties for tax delinquency, from the payments of which the Court of Tax Appeals absolved the Phoenix Assurance on the equitable ground that the latter’s failure to pay the withholding tax was due to the Commissioner’s opinion that no withholding tax was due. Consequently, the taxpayer could be liable for the payment of statutory penalties only upon its failure to comply with the Tax Court’s judgment rendered on 14 February 1962, after Republic Act 2343 took effect. This part of the ruling of the court ought not to be disturbed.--------------------‘

CIR v. BF Goodrich PhilippinesFacts: Private respondent BF Goodrich Philippines Inc. was an American corporation prior to July 3, 1974. As a condition for approving the manufacture of tires and other rubber products, private respondent was required by the Central Bank to develop a rubber plantation. In compliance therewith, private respondent bought from the government certain parcels of land in Tumajubong Basilan, in 1961 under the Public Land Act and the Parity Amendment to the 1935 constitution, and there developed a rubber plantation.On August 2, 1973, the Justice Secretary rendered an opinion that ownership rights of Americans over Public agricultural lands, including the right to dispose or sell their real estate, would be lost upon expiration on July 3, 1974 of the Parity Amendment. Thus, private respondent sold its Basilan land holding to Siltown Realty Phil. Inc., (Siltown) for P500,000 on January 21, 1974. Under the terms of the sale, Siltown would lease the property to private respondent for 25 years with an extension of 25 years at the option of private respondent.Private respondent books of accounts were examined by BIR for purposes of determining its tax liability for 1974. This examinationresulted in the April 23, 1975 assessment of private respondent for deficiency income tax which it duly paid. Siltown’s books of accounts were also examined, and on the basis thereof, on October 10, 1980, the Collector of Internal Revenue assessed deficiency donor’s tax of P1,020,850 in relation to said sale of the Basilan landholdings.Private respondent contested this assessment on November 24, 1980. Another assessment dated March 16, 1981, increasing the amount demanded for the alleged deficiency donor’s tax, surcharge, interest and compromise penalty and was received by private respondent on April 9, 1981. On appeal, CTA upheld the assessment. On review, CA reversed the decision of the court finding that the assessment was made beyond the 5-year prescriptive period in Section 331 of the Tax Code.

Issue: Whether or not petitioner’s right to assess has prescribed.

Held: Applying then Sec. 331, NIRC (now Sec. 203, 1997 NIRC which provides a 3-year prescriptive period for making assessments), it is clean that the October 16, 1980 and March 16, 1981 assessments were issued by the BIR beyond the 5-year statute of limitations. The court thoroughly studied the records of this case and found no basis to disregard the 5-year period of prescription, expressly set under Sec. 331 of the Tax Code, the law then in force.For the purpose of safeguarding taxpayers from any unreasonableexamination, investigation or assessment, our tax law provides astatute of limitations in the collection of taxes. Thus, the law or prescription, being a remedial measure, should be liberally construed in order to afford such protection. As a corollary, the exceptions to the law on prescription should perforce be strictly construed.-------------------

CIR , vs. FMF DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION. [G.R. No. 167765. June 30, 2008.]

Facts: FMF filed its Corporate Annual Income Tax Return for taxable year 1995 and declared a loss of P3,348,932. On May 8, 1996, however, it filed an amended return and declared a loss of P2,826,541. The BIR then sent FMF pre-assessment notices, all dated October 6, 1998, informing it of its alleged tax liabilities. 4 FMF filed a protest against these notices with the BIR and requested for a reconsideration/reinvestigationFMF President Enrique Fernandez executed a waiver of the three-year prescriptive period for the BIR to assess internal revenue taxes, hence extending the assessment period. The waiver was accepted and signed by RDO Zambarrano. FMF received amended pre-assessment

7

Page 8: Remedies Under the NIRC

notices 5 dated October 6, 1999 from the BIR. FMF immediately filed a protest on November 3, 1999 but on the same day, it received BIR's Demand Letter and Assessment Notice No. 33-1-00487-95 dated October 25, 1999 reflecting FMF's alleged deficiency taxes and accrued interests. FMF filed a letter of protest on the assessment invoking, inter alia, 7 the defense of prescription by reason of the invalidity of the waiver. In its reply, the BIR insisted that the waiver is valid because it was signed by the RDO, a duly authorized representative of petitioner. It also ordered FMF to immediately settle its tax liabilities; otherwise, judicial action will be taken. Treating this as BIR's final decision, FMF filed a petition for review with the CTA challenging the validity of the assessment. CTA and CA ruled in favor of respondent.

Issue/ Held: W/N the waiver is valid- NO

Ratio: Applying RMO No. 20-90, the waiver in question here was defective and did not validly extend the original three-year prescriptive period. Firstly, it was not proven that respondent was furnished a copy of the BIR-accepted waiver. Secondly, the waiver was signed only by a revenue district officer, when it should have been signed by the Commissioner as mandated by the NIRC and RMO No. 20-90, considering that the case involves an amount of more than P1 million, and the period to assess is not yet about to prescribe. Lastly, it did not contain the date of acceptance by the CIR , a requisite necessary to determine whether the waiver was validly accepted before the expiration of the original three-year period. Bear in mind that the waiver in question is a bilateral agreement, thus necessitating the very signatures of both the Commissioner and the taxpayer to give birth to a valid agreement.------------------

CIR vs. KUDOS METAL CORPORATION

FACTS:Kudos Metal Corporation filed its Income Tax Return (ITR) on April 1999 for taxable year 1998. However, pursuant to Letter of Authority, the BIR issued three notices of Presentation of Records to Kudos but Kudos did not comply with the said notice. The BIR then issued subpoena duces tecum, thus the review and audit of the record ensued.However, on December 2001, Pasco, the accountant of Kudos executed an affidavit of Waiver of Prescription duly notarized and was received by BIR and accepted the same by Assistant Commissioner Salazar. Pasco executed second waiver on February 2003 following the process undergone by the first waiver she executed.The BIR later issued a Preliminary Notice of Assessment followed by Formal Demand letter to Kudos asking them to settle their tax liabilities for the year 2008 covering the following:

Income Tax 9,693,897.85VAT 13,962,460.90EWT 1,712,336.76Withholding Compensation Tax 247,353.24Penalties 8,000.00TOTAL 25,624,048.76

On appeal, the Court of Tax Appeal en banc affirmed the decision of the CTA Second Division ruling that the government’s right to assess taxes has already prescribed. BIR appealed then appealed to the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:Whether or not the right of the government to assess taxes has already prescribed despite the waivers executed by the accountant of Kudos.

HELD:Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the CTA en banc stating that Section 222 of tax code provide that the period to assess and collect taxes may only be extended upon written agreement between the CIR and the taxpayer following the procedures laid down on RMO 20.90 and RDAO 05-01 such as:

1. Waiver must in official form and the expiration period must be stated.2. Waiver must be notarized and must be signed by the duly authorized representative in case

of representation.

3. The revenue officer must sign the waiver indicating that the BIR has accepted and agreed to the waiver.

4. Both the date of execution by the taxpayer and the acceptance by the revenue officer should be before the expiration of the period agreed upon in case of subsequent waiver.

5. The fact of receipt by the taxpayer of his file copy must be indicated din the original.

In the above case, there is not written authorization given by the management of Kudos to Pasco to execute such waiver. The date of execution of the waiver was not indicated to show if it was executed before the lapsed of the agreed period in the first waiver. The fact of the acceptance of the file copy of the taxpayer was not indicated on the original. The second waiver was filed after the lapsed of the agreed period in the first waiver which was on December 2002. These shows that the waivers were incomplete and defective thus not in accordance with the procedures provided for. Thus, due to the defective waivers, the prescriptive period of 3-years was not extended and it remained 3 years in this case thus the government’s right as already prescribed making the assessment in effective.--------------------

National Marketing Corporation (NAMARCO) v. Tecson

On 10/14/55, the CFI-Mla. rendered judgment in a civil case, Price Stabilization Corp. vs. Tecson, et al. Copy of this decision was, on 10/21/55 served upon defendants in said case. On 12/21/65, NAMARCO, as successor to all the properties, assets, rights, and choses in action of Price, as pltff in that case and judgment creditor therein, filed w/ the same court, a complaint against defendants for the revival of the judgment rendered therein. Def. Tecson moved to dismiss said complaint, upon the ground of prescription of action, among others. The motion was granted by the court. Hence, the appeal to the CA w/c was certified to the SC, upon the ground that the only question raised therein is one of law.

ISSUE: W/n the present action for the revival of a judgment is barred by the statute of limitations.

Pursuant to Art. 1144 (3), NCC, an action for judgment must be brought w/in 10 yrs from the time the judgment sought to be revived has become final. This in turn, took place on 12/21/55 or 30 days from notice of the judgment-- w/c was received by defendants on 10/21/55-- no appeal having been taken therefrom. The issue is thus confined to the date on w/c the 10 yrs from 12/21/55 expired. Pltff alleges that it was 12/21/65, but appellee maintains otherwise, because :when the law speaks of years xxx it shall be understood that years are of 365 days each"-- and, in 1960 and 1964 being leap years, so that 10 yrs of 365 days each, or an aggregate of 3650 days, from 12/21/55, expired on 12/19/65.

Plaintiff.-appellant further insists that there is no question that when it is not a leap year, 12/21 to 12/21 of the following year is one year. If the extra day in a leap year is not a day of the year, bec. it is the 366th day, then to what year does it belong? Certainly, it must belong to the year where it falls, and therefore, that the 366 days constitute one yr.

HELD: The very conclusion thus reached by appellant shows that its theory contravenes the explicit provision of Art. 13 limiting the connotation of each "year"-- as the term is used in our laws-- to 365 days. [The action to enforce a judgment which became final on December 21, 1955 prescribes in 10 years. Since the Civil Code computes "years" in terms of 365 days each, the action has prescribed on December 19, 1955, since the two intervening leap years added two more days to the computation. It is not the calendar year that is considered.]---------------------

CIR v. Primetown Property GroupGR 161155; August 28, 2007

Facts: Gilbert Yap, vice chair of respondent Primetown Property Group, Inc., applied for the refund or credit of income tax respondent’s paid in 1997.

8

Page 9: Remedies Under the NIRC

The CTA found that respondent filed its final adjusted return on April 14, 1998. Thus, its right to claim a refund or credit commenced on that date. According to the CTA, the two-year prescriptive period under Section 229 of the NIRC for the filing of judicial claims was equivalent to 730 days. Because the year 2000 was a leap year, respondent's petition, which was filed 731 days after respondent filed its final adjusted return, was filed beyond the reglementary period.On appeal, the CA reversed and set aside the decision of the CTA.  It ruled that Article 13 of the Civil Code did not distinguish between a regular year and a leap year. According to the CA, even if the year 2000 was a leap year, the periods covered by April 15, 1998 to April 14, 1999 and April 15, 1999 to April 14, 2000 should still be counted as 365 days each or a total of 730 days. A statute which is clear and explicit shall be neither interpreted nor construed.

Issue:      Whether or not the counting of the 2-year prescriptive period for filing claim of refund is governed by the Civil Code.

Held: Counting of 2-year period for filing claim for refund is no longer in accordance with Art 13 of the Civil Code but under Sec 31 of EO 227 - The Administrative Code of 1987.

As between the Civil Code, which provides that a year is equivalent to 365 days, and the Administrative Code of 1987, which states that a year is composed of 12 calendar months, it is the latter that must prevail being the more recent law, following the legal maxim, Lex posteriori derogat priori.

In the case at bar, there are 24 calendar months in 2 years. For a Final Corporate ITR filed on Apr 14, 1998, the counting should start from Apr 15, 1998 and end on Apr 14, 2000.  The procedure is 1st month -Apr 15, 1998 to May 14, 1998 ….  24th month -  Mar 15, 2000 to Apr 14, 2000. National Marketing v. Tecson, 139 Phil 584 (1969) is no longer controlling. The 2-year period should start to run from filing of the final adjusted return.We therefore hold that respondent's petition (filed on April 14, 2000) was filed on the last day of the 24th calendar month from the day respondent filed its final adjusted return. Hence, it was filed within the reglementary period---------------------

Adamson, et al. v. Court of Appeals

FACTS:Case involves a petition for review on certiorari filed by petitioners LUCAS G. ADAMSON, THERESE JUNE D. ADAMSON, and SARA S. DE LOS REYES (private respondents), in their respective capacities as president, treasurer and secretary of Adamson Management Corporation (AMC) against then CIR Liwayway Vinzons-Chato (COMMISSIONER).

On June 20, 1990, Lucas Adamson and AMC sold 131,897 common shares of stock in Adamson and Adamson, Inc. (AAI) to APAC Holding Limited (APAC). The shares were valued atP7,789,995.00.  On June 22, 1990, P159,363.21 was paid as capital gains tax for the transaction.

 On October 12, 1990, AMC sold to APAC Philippines, Inc. another 229,870 common shares of stock in AAI for P17,718,360.00.  AMC paid the capital gains tax of P352,242.96.

 On October 15, 1993, the Commissioner issued a “Notice of Taxpayer” to AMC, Lucas G. Adamson, Therese June D. Adamson and Sara S. de los Reyes, informing them of deficiencies on their payment of capital gains tax and Value Added Tax (VAT).

A deficiency tax assessment was issued against Petitioners relating to their payment of capital gains tax and VAT on their sale of shares of stock and parcels of land. Subsequent to the preliminary conference, the CIR filed with the Department of Justice her Affidavit of Complaint against Petitioners. The Court of Appeals ultimately ruled that, in a criminal prosecution for tax evasion, assessment of tax deficiency is not required because the offense of tax evasion is complete or consummated when the offender has knowingly and willfully filed a fraudulent return with intent to evade the tax. 

ISSUES:(1) Dis the CIR issue an assessment?(2) Must a criminal prosecution for tax evasion be preceded by a deficiency tax assessment?(3) Does the CTA have jurisdiction on the case?

HELD:(1) NO. The recommendation letter of the Commissioner cannot be considered a formal assessment as (a) it was not addressed to the taxpayers; (b) there was no demand made on the taxpayers to pay the tax liability, nor a period for payment set therein; (c) the letter was never mailed or sent to the taxpayers by the Commissioner. It was only an affidavit of the computation of the alleged liabilities and thus merely served as prima facie basis for filing criminal informations.

(2) YES. When fraudulent tax returns are involved as in the cases at bar, a proceeding in court after the collection of such tax may be begun without assessment considering that upon investigation of the examiners of the BIR, there was a preliminary finding of gross discrepancy in the computation of the capital gains taxes due from the transactions. The Tax Code is clear that the remedies may proceed simultaneously.

(3) NO. While the laws governing the CTA have expanded the jurisdiction of the Court, they did not change the jurisdiction of the CTA to entertain an appeal only from a final decision of the Commissioner, or in cases of inaction within the prescribed period. Since in the cases at bar, the Commissioner has not issued an assessment of the tax liability of the Petitioners, the CTA has no jurisdiction.-------------------

BPI v CIR G.R No. 139786 October 17, 2005

Facts: The BIR issued an Assessment for a deficiency of Documentary Stamp Tax (DST). The petitioner filed a protest letter, requesting for reconsideration with BIR however the latter did not reply. Instead, BIR issued a warrant for distraint/levy against petitioner BPI. The petitioner did not hear from BIR until September 11, 1997 when then Commissioner Liwayway Vinzons-Chado, denied its request for reconsideration.

Subsequently, the petitioner filed a petition for review with the CTA, raising the defense of prescription. The CTA denied the petition and held that the period of prescription had not yet prescribed nonetheless, it held that the petitioner was not liable for the deficiency of DST.

On appeal, the CA reversed the ruling of CTA on the issue of DST tax and held that the petitioner was indeed liable for DST.

ISSUE: Whether or not the right of the respondent to collect from petitioner BPI is barred by prescription?

Held: Yes, the Court ruled that the period to collect has already prescribed. The BIR has three years, counted from the date of actual filing of the return or from the last date prescribed by law for the filing of such return, whichever comes later, to assess a national internal revenue tax or to begin a court proceeding for the collection thereof without an assessment.  In case of a false or fraudulent return with intent to evade tax or the failure to file any return at all, the prescriptive period for assessment of the tax due shall be 10 years from discovery by the BIR of the falsity, fraud, or omission.  When the BIR validly issues an assessment, within either the three-year or ten-year period, whichever is appropriate, then the BIR has another three years after the assessment within which to collect the national internal revenue tax due thereon by distraint, levy, and/or court proceeding.  The assessment of the tax is deemed made and the three-year period for collection of the assessed tax begins to run on the date the assessment notice had been released, mailed or sent by the BIR to the taxpayer.

In their Decisions, both the CTA and the Court of Appeals found that the filing by petitioner BPI of a protest letter suspended the running of the prescriptive period for collecting the assessed DST.   This Court, however, takes the opposing view, and, based on the succeeding discussion, concludes that there

9

Page 10: Remedies Under the NIRC

is no valid ground for suspending the running of the prescriptive period for collection of the deficiency DST assessed against petitioner BPI. 

 The statute of limitations on assessment and collection of taxes is for the protection of the taxpayer and, thus, shall be construed liberally in his favor.----------------------

CIR V. ISABELA CULTURAL CORP. (515 SCRA 556)Facts:When the Bureau of Internal Revenue disallowed Isabela Cultural Corporation’s claimed deductions for the years 1984-1986 in their 1986 taxes for expense deductions, to wit:

(1) Expenses for auditing services for the year ending 31 December 1985;(2) Expenses for legal services for the years 1984 and 1985; and(3) Expense for security services for the months of April and May 1986.

As such, the former charged the latter for deficiency income taxes. Isabela Cultural Corporation contests the assessment.Issues and Ruling:

1. For a taxpayer using the accrual method, when do the facts present themselves in such a manner that the taxpayer must recognize income or expense?

The accrual of income and expense is permitted when the all-events test has been met. This test requires: (1) fixing of a right to income or liability to pay; and (2) the availability of the reasonable accurate determination of such income or liability. The test does not demand that the amount of income or liability be known absolutely, only that a taxpayer has at his disposal the information necessary to compute the amount with reasonable accuracy. The all-events test is satisfied where computation remains uncertain, if its basis is unchangeable; the test is satisfied where a computation may be unknown, but is not as much as unknowable, within the taxable year.

2. W/N the deductions were properly claimed by Isabela Cultural Corporation.The deductions for expenses for professional fees consisting of expenses for legal and auditing services are NOT allowable. However, the deductions for expenses for security services were properly claimed by Isabela Cultural Corporation. For the legal and auditing services, Isabela Cultural Corporation could have reasonably known the fees of those firms that it hired, thus satisfying the “all-events test.” As such, per Revenue Audit Memorandum Order No. 1-2000, they cannot validly be deducted from its gross income for the said year and were therefore properly disallowed by the BIR. As for the security services, because they were incurred in 1986, they could be properly claimed as deductions for the said year.

Notes:The requisites for the deductibility of ordinary and necessary trade, business, or professional expenses, like expenses paid for legal and auditing services, are:

a. The expense must be ordinary and necessary;b. It must have been paid or incurred during the taxable year;c. It must have been paid or incurred in carrying on the trade or business of the taxpayer; andd. It must be supported by receipts, records, or other pertinent papers.

Revenue Audit Memorandum Order No. 1-2000, provides that under the accrual method of accounting, expenses not being claimed as deductions by a taxpayer in the current year when they are incurred cannot be claimed as deduction from income for the succeeding year. Thus, a taxpayer who is authorized to deduct certain expenses and other allowable deductions for the current year but failed to do so cannot deduct the same for the next year.----------------------Advertising Associates, Inc. v. Court of Appeals (fulltext)This case is about the liability of Advertising Associates, lnc. for P382,700.16 as 3% contractor's percentage tax on its rental income from the lease of neon signs and billboards imposed by section 191 of the Tax Code.The Commissioner required Advertising Associates to pay P297,927.06 and P84,773.10 as contractor's tax for 1967-1971 and 1972, respectively, including 25% surcharge (the latter amount includes interest) on its income from billboards and neon signs.The basis of the assessment is the fact that the taxpayer's articles of incorporation provide that its primary purpose is to engage in general advertising business. Its income tax returns indicate that its business was advertising 

Advertising Associates contested the assessments in its 'letters of June 25, 1973 (for the 1967-71 deficiency taxes) and March 7, 1974 (for the 1972 deficiency). The Commissioner reiterated the assessments in his letters of July 12 and September 16,1974.The taxpayer requested the cancellation of the assessments in its letters of September 13 and November 21, 1974 (p. 3, Rollo). Inexplicably, for about four years there was no movement in the case. Then, on March 31, 1978, the Commissioner resorted to the summary remedy of issuing two warrants of distraint, directing the collection enforcement division to levy on the taxpayer's personal properties as would be sufficient to satisfy the deficiency taxes (pp. 4, 29 and 30, Rollo). The warrants were served upon the taxpayer on April 18 and May 25, 1978.More than a year later, Acting Commissioner Efren I. Plana wrote a letter dated May 23, 1979 in answer to the requests of the taxpayer for the cancellation of the assessments and the withdrawal of the warrants of distraint.He justified the assessments by stating that the rental income of Advertising Associates from billboards and neon signs constituted fees or compensation for its advertising services. He requested the taxpayer to pay the deficiency taxes within ten days from receipt of the demand; otherwise, the Bureau would enforce the warrants of distraint. He closed his demand letter with this paragraph:

This constitutes our final decision on the matter. If you are not agreeable, you may appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals within 30 days from receipt of this letter.

Advertising Associates received that letter on June 18, 1979. Nineteen days later or on July 7, it filed its petition for review. In its resolution of August 28, 1979, the Tax Court enjoined the enforcement of the warrants of distraint.The Tax Court did not resolve the case on the merits. It ruled that the warrants of distraint were the Commissioner's appealable decisions. Since Advertising Associates appealed from the decision of May 23, 1979, the petition for review was filed out of time. It was dismissed. The taxpayer appealed to this Court.We hold that the petition for review was filed on time. The reviewable decision is that contained in Commissioner Plana's letter of May 23, 1979 and not the warrants of distraint.No amount of quibbling or sophistry can blink the fact that said letter, as its tenor shows, embodies the Commissioner's final decision within the meaning of section 7 of Republic Act No. 1125. The Commissioner said so. He even directed the taxpayer to appeal it to the Tax Court. That was the same situation in St. Stephen's Association and St. Stephen's Chinese Girl's School vs. Collector of Internal Revenue, 104 Phil. 314, 317-318.The directive is in consonance with this Court's dictum that the Commissioner should always indicate to the taxpayer in clear and unequivocal language what constitutes his final determination of the disputed assessment. That procedure is demanded by the pressing need for fair play, regularity and orderliness in administrative action (Surigao Electric Co., Inc. vs. Court of Tax Appeals, L-25289, June 28, 1974, 57 SCRA 523).On the merits of the case, the petitioner relies on the Collector's rulings dated September 12, 1960 and June 20, 1967 that it is neither an independent contractor nor a business agent (Exh. G and H).As already stated, it considers itself a media company, like a newspaper or a radio broadcasting company, but not an advertising agency in spite of the purpose stated in its articles of incorporation. It argues that its act of leasing its neon signs and billboards does not make it a business agent or an independent contractor. It stresses that it is a mere lessor of neon signs and billboards and does not perform advertising services.But the undeniable fact is that neon signs and billboards are primarily designed for advertising. We hold that the petitioner is a business agent and an independent contractor as contemplated in sections 191 and 194(v).However, in view of the prior rulings that the taxpayer is not a business agent nor an independent contractor and in view of the controversial nature of the deficiency assessments, the 25% surcharge should be eliminated (C. M. Hoskins & Co., Inc. vs. CIR , L-28383, June 22, 1976, 71 SCRA 511, 519; Imus Electric Co., Inc. vs. CIR , 125 Phil. 1084).Petitioner's last contention is that the collection of the tax had already prescribed. Section 332 of the 1939 Tax Code, now section 319 of the 1977 Tax Code, Presidential Decree No. 1158, effective on June 3, 1977, provides that the tax may be collected by distraint or levy or by a judicial proceeding begun 'within five years after the assessment of the tax".The taxpayer received on June 18, 1973 and March 5, 1974 the deficiency assessments herein. The warrants of distraint were served upon it on April 18 and may 25,1978 or within five years after the assessment of the tax. Obviously, the warrants were issued to interrupt the five-year prescriptive period. Its enforcement was not implemented because of the pending protests of the taxpayer and its requests

10

Page 11: Remedies Under the NIRC

for withdrawal of the warrants which were eventually resolved in Commissioner Plana's letter of May 23, 1979.It should be noted that the Commissioner did not institute any judicial proceeding to collect the tax. He relied on the warrants of distraint to interrupt the running of the statute of limitations. He gave the taxpayer ample opportunity to contest the assessments but at the same time safeguarded the Government's interest by means of the warrants of distraint.WHEREFORE, the judgment of the Tax Court is reversed and set aside. The Commissioner's deficiency assessments are modified by requiring the petitioner to pay the tax proper and eliminating the 25% surcharge, interest and penalty. In case of non-payment, the warrants of distrant should be implemented. The preliminary injunction issued by the Tax Court on August 28, 1979 restraining the enforcement of said warrants is lifted. No costs.

YABES vs. FLOJOFacts: Doroteo Yabes of Calamaniugan Cagayan, is an exclusive dealer of products of the International Harvester Macleod, Inc., received on or about May 1, 1962, a letter from the CIR dated March 27, 1962, demanding payment of the amount of P15,976.81, as commercial broker's fixed and percentage taxes plus surcharges and the sum of P2,530 as compromise penalty allegedly due from Yabes for the years 1956-1960; On May 11, 1962, Doroteo Yabes, through his counsel, filed with the Commissioner's Office his letter protesting the assessment of commercial broker's fixed and percentage taxes plus penalties against him on the ground that his agreements with the International Harvester Macleod, Inc. were of purchase and sale, and not of agency, hence he claimed he was not able to pay such kind of taxes; Thereafter, there ensued an exchange of correspondence between the lawyers of Doroteo Yabes and the Commissioner; the Commissioner in a letter dated August 3, 1962, informed Doroteo Yabes that he acted as a commercial broker "in accordance with the ruling of this Office in the case of Cirilo D. Constantino;" in turn, Doroteo Yabes, in a letter dated August 22, 1962, requested for the reinvestigation, or review of the case by the appellate division of the Bureau of Internal Revenue in accordance with standing rules, regulations or practice on the matter;  Yabes also wrote the Commissioner on August 24, 1962, requesting that the appeal be held in abeyance pending final decision of the Case of Cirilo D. Constantino;  in reply, the Commissioner informed Doroteo Yabes in a letter dated September 18, 1962, that the latter's request for reinvestigation was denied on the ground that he has "not submitted any evidence to offset the findings of this Office as to warrant a reinvestigation thereof”, but eight days later or on September 26, 1962, the Commissioner wrote a letter advising Doroteo Yabes that "the administrative appeal ... will be held in abeyance pending the resolution of the issues in a similar case (obviously referring to the aforesaid Constantino case)"; To give time for the Commissioner to study the case and several other cases similar thereto, the lawyers of Doroteo Yabes agreed to file, and their client, Doroteo Yabes did file a tax waiver on October 20, 1962, extending the period of prescription to December 31, 1967; Then Doroteo Yabes died and no estate proceedings were instituted for the settlement of his estate; his widow also died during the pendency of the case; the petitioners are the children of the deceased taxpayer.  On March 14, 1966, the Court of Tax Appeals decided the Constantino "test" case. The Court of Tax Appeals ruled that agreements entered into by Constantino with the International Harvester Macleod, Inc. were of purchase and sale, and not of agency, hence no commercial broker's fixed and percentage fees could be collected from the said taxpayer. However this Court on February 27, 1970, in G.R. No. L-25926 reversed the Court of Tax Appeals and ruled in favor of the CIR . After a lapse of about five years, the heirs of the deceased Doroteo Yabes, through their lawyers, received a letter from the Commissioner dated July 27, 1967, requesting that they "waive anew the Statute of Limitations" and further confirming the previous understanding that the final resolution of the protest of the deceased Doroteo Yabes was "being held in abeyance until the Supreme Court renders its decision on a similar case involving the same factual and legal issues brought to it on appeal" (referring to the Constantino "test" case); conformably with the request of the Commissioner, the heirs of Doroteo Yabes filed a revised waiver further extending the period of prescription to December 31, 1970. Thereafter, no word was received by the petitioners or their lawyers during the interim of more than three (3) years, but on January 20, 1971, petitioners as heirs of the deceased Doroteo Yabes received the summons and a copy of the complaint filed by the Commissioner. Taking the complaint as the final decision of the Commissioner on the disputed assessment against the deceased taxpayer Doroteo Yabes, petitioners filed on February 12, 1971, a petition for review of said disputed assessment with the Court of Tax Appeals; 18 later on the same day, February 12, 1971, petitioners filed their answer to the complaint

of the Commissioner before the Court of First Instance of Cagayan; 19 and alleged therein, by way of special defense, that the Court of Tax Appeals has exclusive jurisdiction of the action and that there is another action of the same nature between the parties relating to the same assessment pending before the Court of Tax Appeals;

ISSUE: Whether or not the assessment made by the CIR against the deceased taxpayer Doroteo Yabes, as contained in the letter dated March 27, 1962, has become final, executory and incontestable, after Doroteo Yabes had received the Commissioner's letter dated August 3, 1962, denying the latter's protest against the said assessment on September 18, 1962 and his failure to appeal therefrom within the 30-day period contemplated under Section 11, of Republic Act 1125.

Held: NO.There is no reason for Us to disagree from or reverse the Court of Tax Appeals' conclusion that under the circumstances of this case, what may be considered as final decision or assessment of the Commissioner is the filing of the complaint for collection in the respondent Court of First Instance of Cagayan, the summons of which was served on petitioners on January 20, 1971, and that therefore the appeal with the Court of Tax Appeals in CTA Case No. 2216 was filed on time. 36 The respondent Court of First Instance of Cagayan can only acquire jurisdiction over this case filed against the heirs of the taxpayer if the assessment made by the CIR had become final and incontestable. If the contrary is established, as this Court holds it to be, considering the aforementioned conclusion of the Court of Tax Appeals on the finality and incontestability of the assessment made by the Commissioner is correct, then the Court of Tax Appeals has exclusive jurisdiction over this case. Petitioners received the summons in Civil Case No. II-7 of the respondent Court of First Instance of Cagayan on January 20, 1971, and petitioners filed their appeal with the Court of Tax Appeals in CTA Case No. 2216, on February 12, 1971, well within the thirty-day prescriptive period under Section 11 of Republic Act No. 1125. The Court of Tax Appeals has exclusive appellate jurisdiction to review on appeal any decision of the Collector of Internal Revenue in cases involving disputed assessments and other matters arising under the National Internal Revenue Code. -------------FISHWEALTH CANNING CORPORATION v. CIR G.R. No.  179343 January 21, 2010

FACTS:Petitioner was assessed for income tax, Value Added Tax and withholding tax. After Court of Tax Appeals issued a Final Decision on Disputed Assessment, Petitioner filed a Letter of Reconsideration with the CIR instead of appealing the same to the Court of Tax Appeals within 30 days. The CIR then issued a Preliminary Collection Letter which prompted the Petitioner to file its Petition with the Court of Tax Appeals. CIR argued that the Petition with the Court of Tax Appeals was filed out of time.ISSUE:Did the filing of a Reconsideration toll the running of the 30-day period to appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals?HELD:NO. A Motion for Reconsideration of the denial of the administrative protest does not toll the 30-day period to appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals. ---------------FISHWEALTH CANNING CORPORATION v. CIR

The CIR (respondent), by Letter of Authority dated May 16, 2000,  ordered the examination of the internal revenue taxes for the taxable year 1999 of Fishwealth Canning Corp. (petitioner).  The investigation disclosed that petitioner was liable in the amount of P2,395,826.88 representing income tax, value added tax (VAT), withholding tax deficiencies and other miscellaneous deficiencies.  Petitioner eventually settled these obligations on August 30, 2000.The petition is bereft of merit.

Section 228 of the 1997 Tax Code provides that an assessmentx x x may be protested administratively by filing a request for reconsideration or reinvestigation within thirty (30) days from receipt of the assessment in such form and manner as may be prescribed by implementing rules and regulations.  Within sixty (60) days from filing of the protest, all relevant supporting documents shall have been submitted; otherwise, the assessment shall become final.

11

Page 12: Remedies Under the NIRC

If the protest is denied in whole or in part, or is not acted upon within one hundred eighty (180) days from submission of documents, the taxpayer adversely affected by the decision or inaction may appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals within thirty (30) days from receipt of the said decision, or from the lapse of the one hundred eighty (180)-day period; otherwise, the decision shall become final, executory and demandable. (underscoring supplied)

In the case at bar, petitioner’s administrative protest was denied by Final Decision on Disputed Assessment dated August 2, 2005 issued by respondent and which petitioner received on August 4, 2005.  Under the above-quoted Section 228 of the 1997 Tax Code, petitioner had 30 days to appeal respondent’s denial of its protest to the CTA. 

Since petitioner received the denial of its administrative protest on August 4, 2005, it had until September 3, 2005 to file a petition for review before the CTA Division.  It filed one, however, on October 20, 2005, hence, it was filed out of time.  For a motion for reconsideration of the denial of the administrative protest does not toll the 30-day period to appeal to the CTA.

On petitioner’s final contention that it has a meritorious case in view of the dismissal of the above-mentioned criminal case filed against it for violation of the 1997 Internal Revenue Code, the same fails.  For the criminal complaint was instituted not to demand payment, but to penalize the taxpayer for violation of the Tax Code.------------------

Lascona Land Co., Inc. v. CIROn March 27, 1998, the CIR issued Assessment Notice No. 0000047-93-407 against Lascona Land (Lascona) informing the latter of its alleged deficiency income tax for the year 1993 in the amount of P753,266.56.Consequently, on April 20, 1998, Lascona filed a letter protest, but was denied., thus:

“Anent the 1993 tax case of subject taxpayer, please be informed that while we agree with the arguments advanced in your letter protest, we regret, however, that we cannot give due course to your request to cancel or set aside the assessment notice issued to your client for the reason that the case was not elevated to the Court of Tax Appeals as mandated by the provisions of the last paragraph of Section 228 of the Tax Code. By virtue thereof, the said assessment notice has become final, executory and demandable. In view of the foregoing, please advise your client to pay its 1993 deficiency income tax liability in the amount of P753,266.56.”

On April 12, 1999, Lascona appealed the decision before the CTA. Lascona alleged that the Regional Director erred in ruling that the failure to appeal to the CTA within 30 days from the lapse of the 180-day period rendered the assessment final and executory.The CIR, however, maintained that Lascona's failure to timely file an appeal with the CTA after the lapse of the 180-day reglementary period provided under Section 228 of the NIRC resulted to the finality of the assessment.CTA, in its Decision,7 nullified the subject assessment. It held that in cases of inaction by the CIR on the protested assessment, Section 228 of the NIRC provided two options for the taxpayer: (1) appeal to the CTA within thirty (30) days from the lapse of the one hundred eighty (180)-day period, or (2) wait until the Commissioner decides on his protest before he elevates the case.The CIR moved for reconsideration. It argued that in declaring the subject assessment as final, executory and demandable, it did so pursuant to Section 3 (3.1.5) of Revenue Regulations No. 12-99 dated September 6, 1999 which reads, thus:If the Commissioner or his duly authorized representative fails to act on the taxpayer's protest within one hundred eighty (180) days from date of submission, by the taxpayer, of the required documents in support of his protest, the taxpayer may appeal to the Court of Tax Appeals within thirty (30) days from the lapse of the said 180-day period; otherwise, the assessment shall become final, executory and demandable.On March 3, 2000, the CTA denied the CIR's motion for reconsideration for lack of merit.8 The CTA held that Revenue Regulations No. 12-99 must conform to Section 228 of the NIRC. It pointed out that the former spoke of an assessment becoming final, executory and demandable by reason of the inaction by the Commissioner, while the latter referred to decisions becoming final, executory and demandable should the taxpayer adversely affected by the decision fail to appeal before the CTA within the prescribed period. Finally, it emphasized that in cases of discrepancy, Section 228 of the NIRC must prevail over the revenue regulations.HELD:

The Supreme Court declared that Lascona’s appeal was timely filed on April 12, 1999 before the CTA. The appeal was made within 30 days after receipt of the copy of the decision, reckoned from March 12, 1999 when Lascona received the Letter dated March 3, 1999.

 In case the CIR failed to act on the disputed assessment within the 180-day period from date of submission of documents, a taxpayer can either: (1) file a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals within 30 days after the expiration of the 180-day period; or (2) await the final decision of the Commissioner on the disputed assessments and appeal such final decision to the Court of Tax Appeals within 30 days after receipt of a copy of such decision. These options are mutually exclusive and resort to one bars the application of the other. In arguing that the assessment became final and executory by the sole reason that petitioner failed to appeal the inaction of the Commissioner within 30 days after the 180-day reglementary period, respondent, in effect, limited the remedy of Lascona, as a taxpayer, under Section 228 of the National Internal Revenue Code to just one, that is – to appeal the inaction of the Commissioner on its protested assessment after the lapse of the 180-day period. This is incorrect. The word “decisions” in paragraph 1, Section 7 of Republic Act No. 1125, has been interpreted to mean the decisions of the CIR on the protest of the taxpayer against the assessments. Taxpayers cannot be left in quandary by the Commissioner’s inaction on the protested assessment.  The taxpayers must be informed informed of its action in order that the taxpayer should be able to take recourse to the tax court at the opportune time. Finally, as pointed out by the Court of Tax Appeals, to adopt the interpretation of the Commissioner will not only sanction inefficiency, but will likewise condone the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s inaction------------------------Allied Banking Corporation v. ParaynoFACTS: Allied Banking Corporation is a duly licensed domestic commercial banking institution with principal office at 6754 Ayala Avenue, Makati City, Metro Manila.

BIR assessed them for Deficiency Documentary Stamp Tax on its Market Savings Deposit Placements for 1997, computed as:Total Market Savings Deposit P 8,098,772,166.67Rate of Tax 0.30 / 200Basic Documentary Stamp Tax Due P 12,148,158.25Add: 25% Surcharge P 3,037,039.56TOTAL AMOUNT DUE & PAYABLE: P 15,185,197.81

BIR final decision along with warning of Warrant of Distraint and/ or Levy and Garnishment was received by Allied Bank on Oct. 15, 2002.Allied Bank filed this petition for review in the C.T.A.BIR’s Answer – Special and Affirmative Defenses:1. C.T.A. has no jurisdiction over the instant case as the subject assessments have already become

final, executory and demandable in accordance with SECTION 228 of the 1997 Tax Code;xxx xxx xxx

If the protest is denied in whole or in part, or is not acted upon within 180 days from submission of documents, the taxpayer adversely affected by the decision or inaction may appeal to the C.T.A. within 30 days from receipt of the said decision, or from the lapse of the 180-day period;

Otherwise, the decision shall become final, executory and demandable.

Since the 30 day period expired from the lapse of the 180-day period without Allied Bank filing the appeal as required by law – the assessments have become final.BIR claims that the 180-day period ran from Sept. 24, 1999, the date when petitioner filed its protest-letter.

2. Allied Bank’s “Market Savings Deposit” is considered a certificate of deposit contemplated and taxable under SECTIOn 180 of the Tax Code;

3. In the case of BPI-Family Bank V. CIR & CTA, CA-GR No. SP 29853, Sept. 19, 1994, the CA in interpreting NIRC SECTION 180 named with particularity the instruments subject to D.S.T.:

i. promissory note, whether negotiable or not;

12

Page 13: Remedies Under the NIRC

ii. bills of exchange;iii. drafts;iv. certificates of deposit;v. debt instruments used for deposit substitutes.

4. A “certificate of deposit” is a written acknowledgment of a bank of the receipt of money on deposit which the bank promises to pay to the depositor, bearer or to some other person or order (Olson Estate 206, Iowa, 706 – cited in Agbayani, p.44)

5. Elements of Certificate of Deposit:(i.) that a bank received money on deposit;(ii.) from someone who is considered a depositor;(iii.) that the bank acknowledges the receipt of the deposit in writing;(iv.) that the bank promises to pay to the depositor/ bearer/ or to some other person or order the

deposit or any part thereof.Allied Bank’s “Market Savings Deposit” has met these requirements.

6. SECTION 180 does not prescribe any particular form for a “certificate of deposit.”7. All presumptions are in favor of the correctness of tax assessments.

Good Faith are tax assessors and the validity of their actions are presumed.They will be presumed to have taken into consideration all the facts to which their attention was called. (CIR V. Construction Resources of Asia, Inc.)It is incumbent upon the taxpayer to prove the contrary (Mindanao Bus Company V. CIR; CIR V. Antonio Tuazon, Inc.), and failure to do so shall vest legality to respondent’s actions and assessments.

The case was deemed submitted for decision on June 18, 2004.Allied Bank claims that “Market Savings Deposit” is not the same as “Time Deposit” since (1.) it has no specific maturity date;(2.) it is evidenced by a regular savings passbook

BIR counters that Allied Bank’s “Market Savings Deposit” has the similar features to a time deposit such as:(1.) higher interest rate than regular savings account;(2.) required minimum deposit balance;(3.) holding period in order to avail of the preferential rate

ISSUE/S:1. WON the C.T.A. has jurisdiction over the instant case for failure of Allied Bank to comply with

SECTION 228 of the NIRC 1997?

2. WON the Market Savings Deposit is of the same nature as that of Time Deposit and therefore subject to Documentary Stamp Tax?

HELD:1.) C.T.A. has jurisdiction2.) Yes – both the certificate of time deposit as well as the passbook evidencing market savings deposit, are subject to Documentary Stamp Tax.RATIO:(1.) In this particular case, the petition for review was filed on time, on Nov. 14, 2002, within 30 days from receipt of the Decision of the CIR.Citing LASCONA LAND CO., INC. V. CIR – C.T.A. Case No. 5777; Jan. 4, 2000:

“It bears stressing that the wordings of Section 228 of the Tax Code clearly provide that it is only the decision not appealed by the taxpayer that becomes final, executory and demandable.Otherwise, the authors of the law could have easily included the words assessment as also becoming final, executory and demandable should the BIR fail to act on the protest within 180 days.As aptly cited by Petitioner, in CIR V. Villa, the SC held:

“The word “decisions” in paragraph 1, SECTION 7 of RA 1125, quoted above has been interpreted to mean the decisions of the CIR on the protest of the taxpayer against the assessments.

Definitely, said word does not signify the assessment itself.“In the first place, we believe the respondent court erred in holding that the assessment in question is the respondent Collector’s decision or ruling appealable to it, and that consequently, the period of 30 days prescribed by SECTION 11 of RA 1125 within which petitioner should have appealed to the respondent court must be counted from its receipt of said assessment.Where a taxpayer questions an assessment and asks the Collector to reconsider or cancel the same because he (the taxpayer) believes he is not liable therefor, the assessment becomes a ‘disputed assesment’ that the Collector must decide, and the taxpayer can appeal to the C.T.A. only upon receipt of the decision of the Collector on the disputed assessment, xxx”

The same interpretation finds support in RA 1125

SECTION 11. WHO MAY APPEAL; EFFECT OF APPEAL. – Any person, association or corporation adversely affected by a decision or ruling the the Collector of Internal Revenue, the Collector of Customs or any provincial or city Board of Assessment Appeals may file an appeal in the CTA within 30 days after the receipt of such decision or ruling.

Note that the law uses the word ‘decisions’, not ‘assessments’, thus further indicating the legislative intent to subject to judicial review the decision of the Commissioner on the protest against an assessment but not the assessment itself.

Verily, in case of inaction, Sec. 228 of the Tax Code merely gave the taxpayer an option: first, he may appeal to the CTA within 30 days from the lapse of the 180-day period; or second, he may wait until the Commissioner decides on his protest before he elevates his case. The court believes that the taxpayer was given this option so that in case his protest is not acted upon within the 180-day period, he may be able to seek immediate relief and need not wait for an indefinite period of time for the Commissioner to decide. But if he chooses to wait for a positive action on the part of the Commissioner, then the same could not result in the assessment becoming final, executory and demandable.”

(2.) Terminologies are mere matters which are capable of being overturned by circumstances.What is controlling is the nature and the true character of the transaction as it is conveyed by the instrument or document attached to it. (L.R. Heat Treating Co.)Documentary Stamp Tax is an excise tax on the privilege to enter into a transaction.NIRC

SECTION 180. STAMP TAX ON ALL LOAN AGREEMENTS, PROMISSORY NOTES, BILLS OF EXCHANGE, DRAFTS, INSTRUMENTS AND SECURITIES ISSUED BY THE GOVERNMENT OR ANY OF ITS INSTRUMENTALITIES, CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT BEARING INTEREST AND OTEHRS NOT PAYABLE ON SIGHT OR DEMAND. - - On all: (1.) loan agreements signed abroad wherein the object of the contract is located or used in the Philippines, bills of exchange (between points within the Philippines), (2.) drafts, instruments and securities issued by the Government or any of its instrumentalities or (3.) certificates of deposits drawing interest, or (4.) orders for the payment of any sum of money otherwise than at sight or on demand, or (5.) on all promissory notes, whether negotiable or non-negotiable, except bank notes issued for circulation, and (6.) on each renewal of any such note,There shall be collected a Documentary Stamp Tax (DST) of P0.30 on each P200, or fractional part thereof, of the face value of any such: agreement, bill of exchange, draft, certificate of deposit, or note:

Provided, That only 1 DST shall be imposed on either loan agreement, or promissory notes issued to secure such loan whichever will yield a higher tax:

xxx xxx xxx

The law subjects a “certificate of deposit” to documentary stamp tax.

13

Page 14: Remedies Under the NIRC

The law taxes the document because of the transaction (citing The Law On Transfer and Business Taxation, by Hector S. de Leon, 1998 ed., p. 351).A certificate of deposit – is “any written acknowledgment by a bank or banker of the receipt of a sum of money on deposit which the bank or banker promises to pay to the depositor, to the order of the depositor, or some other person or his order xxx” (Far East Bank & Trust Company V. Querimit).The definition does not prescribe or require any particular form nor does it qualify.In determining what instruments are subject to DST – substance would control over the form.A “time deposit” – refers to a deposit amount paying interest for a fixed term, with the understanding

that the funds cannot be withdrawn before maturity without giving advanced notice. Usually carry “penalties” for early withdrawal in a form of reduced interest rates.In both Time Deposit and Market Savings Deposit – the deposit may be withdrawn anytime, but the depositor gets to earn a lower rate of interest.The Only Difference is the “Evidence of Deposit.” Time Deposit Certificate of DepositMarket Savings Deposit PassbookThe Court cited the testimony of Allied Bank’s Witness Ms. Jimenez. The premium rate given in a Market Savings Deposit is an incentive for a client who keeps his money

for at least 30 days in the bank. The client can choose a period: 30 or 60 days.DISPOSITION: Petition DISMISSED for lack of merit.

CIR Decision assessing Allied Bank of Deficiency Documentary Stamp Tax for 1997 are hereby AFFIRMED.

Allied Bank is DIRECTED TO PAY the assessment, plus 30% delinquency interest from Nov. 14, 2002 up to the time such amount is fully paid.

NOTES: I think this decision is overturned by the Oct. 2005 CA case: Lascona V. CIRIt’s not really fair to expect us to know the proper interpretation when the CTA interpretation – specialized court for taxes gets overturned by CA’s interpretation-----------------------------

RCBC vs CIR 522 SCRA 144Facts:RCBC received a Formal Letter of Demand dated May 25, 2001 from the respondent CIR for its taxliabilities particularly for Gross Onshore Tax in the amount of P53,998,428.29 and Documentary StampTax for its Special Savings Placements in the amount of P46,717,952.76, for the taxable year 1997.Petitioner filed a protest letter/request for reconsideration/reinvestigation pursuant to Section 228 of the NIRC. As the protest was not acted upon by the respondent, petitioner filed a petition for review withthe CTA for the cancellation of the assessments. Respondent filed a motion to resolve first the issue of  CTA’s jurisdiction, which was granted by the CTA in a Resolution dated September 10, 2003.8 The petition for review was dismissed because it was filed beyond the 30-day period following the lapse of 180 days from petitioner’s submission of documents in support of its protest, as provided under Section228 of the NIRC and Section 11 of R.A. No. 1125, otherwise known as the Law Creating the Court of  Tax Appeals. Petitioner did not file a motion for reconsideration or an appeal to the CTA En Banc fromthe dismissal of its petition for review. Consequently, the September 10, 2003 Resolution became finaland executory on October 1, 2003 and Entry of Judgment was made on December 1, 2003.9Thereafter, respondent sent a Demand Letter to petitioner for the payment of the deficiency taxassessments. On February 20, 2004, petitioner filed a Petition for Relief from Judgment on the ground of excusable negligence of its counsel’s secretary who allegedly misfiled and lost the September 10, 2003Resolution. The CTA Second Division set the case for hearing on April 2, 200411 during which petitioner’s counsel was present.12 Respondent filed an Opposition13 while petitioner submitted itsManifestation and Counter-Motion. On May 3, 2004, the CTA Second Division rendered a Resolution15denying petitioner’s Petition for  Relief from Judgment. Petitioner’s motion for reconsideration wasdenied in a Resolution dated November 5, 2004, hence it filed a petition for review with the CTA En Banc, docketed as C.T.A. EB No. 50, which affirmed the assailed Resolutions of the CTA SecondDivision in a Decision dated June 7, 2005.

Ruling:As provided in Sec. 228, the failure of the taxpayer to appeal from an assessment on time rendered the assessment final, executory and demandable. RCBC is precluded from disputing the correctness of the assessment. While the right to appeal a decision of the Commissioner of CTA is merely a statutory remedy, nevertheless the requirement that it must be brought within 30 days is jurisdictional. If a statutory remedy provides as a condition precedent that the action to enforce it must be commenced within a prescribed time, such requirement is jurisdictional and failure to comply therewith may be raised in a MTD.-------------------------La Flor dela Isabela, Inc. v CIR

La Flor is a domestic corporation. In 2000 the letter of authority for assessment for taxable year 1999 was issued by the BIR. From 2002 to 2005, La Flor executed five Waivers to extend BIR’s period to assess the taxes. The Formal Letter of Demand (FDL) for the tax deficiency was received by La Flor before the expiration of the 5th waiver in 2005.La Flor immediately filed a protest against the FDL. It also filed a supplemental protest less than two weeks after. After 2 years, June 2007, La Flor received a Final Decision on Disputed Assessments (FDDA) indicating its deficiency taxes in the total amount of P10,460,217.23.On October 2007, petitioner filed an application for tax amnesty. Ten days later it also filed an application for compromise agreement pursuant to Section 204 of the Tax Code. La Flor received an undated Warrant of Distraint and/or Levy (WDL) issued by BIR.

ISSUE: WON La Flor can still validly assail the assessment.

HELD: NO. If a protest is not acted upon by respondent within 180 days from submission of supporting documents, the taxpayer adversely affected by such inaction may appeal to the CTA within 30 days from the lapse of the 180-day period. La Flor should have appealed to the CTA when it did not receive action on its protest immediately.To reiterate, the failure of a taxpayer to file a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals within the statutory period rendered the disputed assessment final, executory and demandable, thereby precluding the said taxpayer from interposing the defenses of legality or validity of the assessment and prescription of the Government's right to assess. Indeed, any objection against the assessment should have been pursued following the avenue paved in Section 229 (now Section 228) of the NIRC on protests on assessments of internal revenue taxes.---------------

OCEANIC WIRELESS NETWORK, INC. vs. CIR(G.R. No. 148380, December 9, 2005) | MCACBFacts:The controversy in this case started when the petitioner received from the BIR deficiency tax assessments for the year 1984. When the petitioner filed a protest and requested for a reconsideration or cancellation of the same, the Chief of the Accounts Receivable and Billing Division of the BIR National Office reiterated the tax assessments and requested the petitioner to pay within 10 days, while denied its request for reinvestigation. Upon the petitioner’s failure to pay the subject tax assessments within the prescribed period, the Asst. Commissioner for Collection, acting for the CIR, issued the corresponding warrants of distraints and/or levy and garnishment. This prodded the petitioner to file a Petition for Review with the CTA to contest the issuance of the warrants and to enforce the collection of the tax assessments.The CTA, however, dismissed the petition, declaring that it was filed beyond the 30-day period reckoned from the time it received the demand letter on January 24, 1991 by the Chief of the BIR Accounts Receivable and Billing Division.

Issue: Is the demand letter for tax deficiency assessments issued and signed by a subordinate officer who was acting in behalf of the CIR deemed final and executor and subject to an appeal to the CTA?

14

Page 15: Remedies Under the NIRC

Ruling:Yes. Firstly, a demand letter for payment of delinquent taxes may be considered a decision on a disputed or protested assessment. The determination on whether or not a demand letter is final is conditioned upon the language used or the tenor of the letter being sent to the taxpayer. In this case, the demand letter received by the petitioner signified a character of finality for it clearly indicates its firm stand against the reconsideration of the assessment when it indicated that “failure to do so (to pay) would result in the issuance of a warrant of distraint and levy to enforce its collection without further notice.”Secondly, the letter attained finality despite the fact that it was issued and signed by the Chief of the Accounts Receivable and Billing Division instead of the CIR. This is because the act of the said Chief does not fall under the exceptions provided in Sec. 7 of the NIRC, which constitutes actions of the CIR that are non-delegable. Further, Sec. 6 of the NIRC expressly provides that the “Commissioner or his duly authorized representative may authorize the examination of any taxpayer and the assessment of the correct amount of tax.…”Lastly, the petitioner failed to avail of its right to bring the matter before the CTA within the reglementary period upon the receipt of the demand letter reiterating the assessed delinquent taxes and denying its request for reconsideration which constituted the final determination by the BIR on petitioner’s protest. Being a final disposition by the said agency, the same would have been a proper subject for appeal to the CTA.--------------

CIR vs.TOKYO SHIPPING CO. LTD., represented by SORIAMONT STEAMSHIP AGENCIES INC244 SCRA 342; May 26, 1995

Facts: Tokyo Shipping a foreign corporation represented in the Philippines by Soriamont Steamship Agencies and owns and operates M/V Gardenia. NASUTRA 2 chartered M/V Gardenia to load 16,500 metric tons of raw sugar in the Philippines. Soriamont Agency,  4 paid the required income and common carrier's taxes P59,523.75 and P47,619.00, respectively (Total P107,142.75). Upon arriving, however, at Guimaras Port of Iloilo, the vessel found no sugar for loading. NASUTRA and Soriamont mutually agreed to have the vessel sail for Japan without any cargo. Claiming the pre-payment of income and common carrier's taxes as erroneous since no receipt was realized from the charter agreement, Tokyo instituted a claim for tax credit or refund of the sum P107,142.75 from CIR. Petitioner failed to act promptly on the claim , hence Tokyo filed a petition for review 6 before Court of Tax Appeals. CTA decided for Tokyo and denied MR of CIR.

Issue: WON Tokyo Shipping Co. Ltd., is entitled to a refund or tax credit – whether it was able to prove that it derived no receipts from its charter agreement, and hence is entitled to a refund of the taxes it pre-paid to the government.

Ruling: Yes. Pursuant to Section 24 (b) (2) of the National Internal Revenue Code which at that time, a resident foreign corporation engaged in the transport of cargo is liable for taxes depending on the amount of income it derives from sources within the Philippines. Thus, before such a tax liability can be enforced the taxpayer must be shown to have earned income sourced from the Philippines.Indeed, a claim for refund is in the nature of a claim for exemption  8 and should be construed in strictissimi juris against the taxpayer. And Tokyo has the burden of proof to establish the factual basis of its claim for tax refund. But sufficient evidence has already been adduced by Tokyo proving that it derived no receipt from its charter agreement with NASUTRA - M/V "Gardenia" arrived in Iloilo on January 10, 1981 but found no raw sugar to load and returned to Japan without any cargo laden on board.---------------------------CIR v. PhilamlifeFacts: On May 30, 1983, Philamlife paid its 1983 1st Quarter income tax of P3,246,141. On August 29, 1983, it paid P396,874 for the 2nd Quarter and also paid P708,464 for the3rd Quarter. In the 4th Quarter however, it suffered loss and thereby had no income tax liability. It therefore declared refund of the 1st and 2nd Quarter payments. In 198r, Philamlife suffered loss again and applied for tax credit of its overpaid taxes in 1983 and 1982. ON December 16, 1985, it filed another claim for refund with the CIR’s appellate division for an amended and increased amount. On January 2, 1986, it filed petition for review with the CTA.

The issue is the reckoning date of the two-year prescriptive period provided in Section 230 of the NIRC for the recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. CIR claims that the running of the prescriptive period commences from the remittance/payment at the end of the first quarter of the tax withheld instead of from the filing of the Final Adjustment Return. In such a case, Philamlife is not entitled for refund.

Held: CIR is wrong. The prescriptive period of two years should commence to run only from the time that the refund is ascertained, which can only be determined after a final adjustment return is accomplished. In the present case, this date is April 16, 1984, and two years from this date would be April 19, 1986. The record shows that the claim for refund was field on December 10, 1985 and the petition for review was brought before the CTA on January 2, 1986. Both dates are within the two-year reglementary period. Even if the two-year prescriptive period had already lapsed, the same is not jurisdictional and may be suspended for reasons of equity and other special circumstances.--------------CIR v. Manila Electric Company, Inc THE PARTIESPetitioner is the duly appointed CIR empowered to assess and collect all national internal revenue taxes, fees, and charges, including the power to decide refunds of internal revenue taxes, fees or other charges, with office address at the Bureau of Internal Revenue (hereinafter "BIR") National Office Building, Agham Road, Diliman, Quezon City, where she may be served with summons and other legal processes. On the other hand, respondent Manila Electric Company (hereinafter "MERALCO") is a domestic corporation duly organized and existing under thelaws of the Republic of the Philippines, with principal office at Lopez Building, Ortigas Avenue, Pasig City, and engaged in the business of distributing and supplying electric power.On December 23, 1993, MERALCO filed with the Energy Regulatory Board (hereinafter "ERB") an application for the revision of its rate schedules with a prayer for a provisional approval of the increase, docketed as ERB Case No. 93-118. On January 28, 1994, the ERB issued an Order granting a provisional increase of P0.184 per kwh, subject to the condition that after hearing and evaluation, should MERALCO be entitled to a lesser increase in rates, all excess amounts collected by MERALCO shall be refunded to its customers or credited to their future consumption. Thus, MERALCO paid the income tax due on its taxable income basedon gross electric revenue computed at an average basic distribution rate of P2.996 per kwh (i.e., existing average rate of P2.812 per kwh, plus provisional increase ofP0.184).On February 16, 1998, the ERB rendered a decision granting a rate increase of only P0.017 per kwh and ordering MERALCO to refund or credit to its customers the average amount ofP0.167 per kwh beginning February 1994. MERALCO appealed the decision of the ERB to the Court of Appeals, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 46888. On February 24, 1999, the Court of Appeals rendered a decision reversing the ERB decision.The CIR and the Lawyers Against Monopoly and Poverty, et al. appealed the decision of the Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court, docketed as G.R. No. 141314 entitled "Republic of the Philippines, represented by Energy Regulatory Board vs. Manila Electric Company ", and G.R. No. 141369 entitled"Lawyers Against Monopoly and Poverty (LAMP), et al. vs. Manila Electric Company ", respectively.On November 15, 2002, the Supreme Court rendered a decision in G.R. Nos. 141314 and 141369 reversing the decision of the Court of Appeals. On May 5, 2003, the decision of the Supreme Court became final and executory. On November 27, 2003, MERALCO filed a claim for tax refund or creditof excess income tax payments with the CIR. On May 4, 2005, due to inaction, MERALCO appealed to this Court in Division its claim for refund or tax credit of excess income tax payment by way of a "Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam )".In her answer, by way of special and affirmative defenses, the CIR alleged: this Court is without jurisdiction to entertain the instant petition; MERALCO's assertion that the two (2)-year period should be reckoned from the time the Supreme Court decision came out cannot be sustained; MERALCO has no cause of action under the provision of solutio indebiti; equity belongs to those who come to court with clean hands; MERALCO had the opportunity to claim for refund as early as 1998 when the ERB issued its decision ordering MERALCO to refund PO.l67 per kilowatthour to its consumers; and theinequity of MERALCO is further exposed when it prayed for the refund of the entire amount of alleged erroneously collected income taxes it paid from 1994- 1998 and 2000-2001, when it has not even showed proof that it paid all of the amounts it should refund to its consumers.

15

Page 16: Remedies Under the NIRC

On November 22, 2005, MERALCO filed a "Motion for Leave to Amend Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam)" with attached "Amended Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam)" for the purpose of excluding its claim for tax refund or credit for taxable year 2001 in the amount ofP1,071,546,018.00 on the ground that on October 3, 2005, MERALCO received the letter-decision dated September 21, 2005 from the CIR partially granting its administrative claim for refund or credit for taxable year 2001 to the extent of P894,4 73,932.58, but denying the claim for taxable years 1994-1998 and 2000 due to prescription. In its "Amended Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam)", MERALCO prayed that it be refunded or issued a tax credit certificate in the amount of P6,035,988,264.00, representing excess income tax payments for taxable years 1994-1998 and 2000.On November 24, 2005, the Second Division granted MERALCO's "Motion for Leave to Amend Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam)", admitted the "Amended Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam)", and granted the CIR fifteen ( 15) days from notice to file her amended answer.On December 9, 2005, the CIR filed her "Answer" to the Amended Petition for Review (Ad Cautelam). After the pre-trial was terminated, on May 5, 2006, MERALCO filed a "Motion to Suspend Proceedings", which the Court granted. On September 20, 2006, the CIR filed a "Manifestation with Motion to Admit Attached Supplemental Answer", which the Court granted. On November 30, 2006, MERALCO filed its "Reply" to the supplemental answer. After trial on the merits, on December 6, 2010, the Second Division rendered the assailed Decision granting the Amended Petition for Review.On December 23, 2010, MERALCO filed a "Motion for Partial Reconsideration and Clarification", while on December 28, 2010, the CIR filed her "Motion for Reconsideration". In a Resolution dated April 15, 2011, both motions were denied for lack of merit.

ISSUE: WHETHER THE SECOND DIVISION OF THE HONORABLE COURT ERRED IN GRANTINGRESPONDENT'S CLAIM FOR REFUND IN THE AGGREGATE AMOUNT OF I!5,796,342,792.71 FORTAXABLE YEARS 1994-1998 AND 2000 DESPITE THE FACT THAT SAID CLAIM IS BARRED ON ACCOUNT OF PRESCRIPTION.

Petitioner CIR 's ArgumentsThe CIR argues that a claim for refund cannot be made after the two (2)- year prescriptive period provided under Section 229 of the NIRC of 1997, as amended. Since the claim for refund covers the taxable periods 1994 to 1998 and 2000, the Petition for Review filed on May 4, 2005 was evidently filed beyond the prescriptive period, and with the recommendation of denial from the Revenue Examiners on the ground of prescription, the inescapable conclusion is that MERALCO is barred from recovering income taxes paid for the subject taxable years.

Respondent MERALCO's Counter-ArgumentsRespondent MERALCO, on the other hand, counter-argues that no one, not even the State should enrich itself at the expense of another. Relying in good faith on the ERB 's issuance of the provisional increase, the decision of the ERB on the allowable increase, the appeal to the Court of Appeals and the subsequent decision ofthe Supreme Court in G.R. Nos. 141314 and 141369, MERALCO claims that on said interim periods, it should not be penalized for declaring for tax purposes the income it derived therefrom, and thus, prays for the dismissal of the petition.

HELD: 1. The two (2)-vear prescriptive period under Section 229 is mandatorySection 229 provides:

"SEC. 229. Recovery of Tax Erroenously or Illegally Collected.XXX XXXIn any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be filed after the expiration of two (2) years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment: Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously paid".

Therefore, MERALCO's claim for refund should have been filed within the two (2)-year prescribed period, reckoned from the dates the income taxes thereon had been paid, and not from May 5, 2003, the date the decision of theSupreme Court in G.R. Nos. 141314 and 141369 had become final and executory. MERALCO's appeals to the Court of Appeals and to the Supreme Court are both extraneous matters that occurred after payment of the tax, hence, not relevant in determining the prescriptive period.

2 .The rule on solutio indebiti cannot be applied toMERALCOMERALCO cannot invoke the rule of solutio indebiti to justify its claim for refund.In the case of Bank of the Philippine Islands vs. Sarmiento, 484 SCRA 271, the Supreme Court held:"There is solutio indebiti where: (1) payment is made when there exists no binding relation between the payor, who has no duty to pay, and the person who received the payment; and (2) the payment is made through mistake, and not through liberality or some other cause. x x x The quasi-contract of solutio indebiti is based on the ancient principle that no one shall enrich himself unjustly at the expense of another" (Power Commercial and Industrial Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. I 19745, June 20, 1997, 274 SCRA 597, 612, 61 3).Pursuant to the above ruling, the elements of solutio indebiti are: ( 1) payment is made when there exists no binding relation between the payor, who has no duty to pay, and the person who received the payment; and (2) the payment is made through mistake, and not through liberality or some other cause. Both elements are lacking in the present case. First, there exists a binding relation between MERALCO and the CIR. MERALCO is a taxpayer obligated to pay income taxes on the income it declared in its income tax returns for the years 1994-1998 and 2000. Second, there is no mistake on the part of MERALCO when it paid income taxes to the BIR for the years 1994-1998 and 2000. MERALCO was fully aware ofthe status of its application for revision of its rate schedule and the proceedings that transpired thereafter. It was fully aware that the increase granted to it in the ERB Order dated January 28, 1994 was merely provisional and subject to the condition that after hearing and evaluation, should MERALCO be entitled to a lesser increase in rates, all excess collected by MERALCO shall be refunded to its customers or credited to their future consumption. At the outset, when the ERB provisionally granted and subjected to a condition its application for increase, MERALCO should have known the consequences of a possible reduction of its application.-----------------

CIR v. PNBThru this appeal by way of a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, petitioner CIR seeks to set aside the Decision dated October 14, 20031 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 76488 and its Resolution dated January 26, 20042 denying petitioner’s motion for reconsideration.The petition is cast against the following factual setting:In early April 1991, respondent Philippine National Bank (PNB) issued to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) PNB Cashier’s Check No. 109435 for P180,000,000.00. The check represented PNB’s advance income tax payment for the bank’s 1991 operations and was remitted in response to then President Corazon C. Aquino’s call to generate more revenues for national development. The BIR acknowledged receipt of the amount by issuing Payment Order No. C-10151465 and BIR Confirmation Receipt No. 22063553, both dated April 15, 1991.3

Via separate letters dated April 19 and 29, 1991 and May 14, 19914 to then BIR Commissioner Jose C. Ong, PNB requested the issuance of a tax credit certificate (TCC) to be utilized against future tax obligations of the bank.For the first and second quarters of 1991, PNB also paid additional taxes amounting to P6,096,150.00 and P26,854,505.80, respectively, as shown in its corporate quarterly income tax return filed on May 30, 1991.5Inclusive of the P180 Million aforementioned, PNB paid and BIR received in 1991 the aggregate amount of P212, 950,656.79.6 This final figure, if tacked to PNB’s prior year’s excess tax credit (P1,385,198.30) and the creditable tax withheld for 1991 (P3,216,267.29), adds up to P217,552,122.38.By the end of CY 1991, PNB’s annual income tax liability, per its 1992 annual income tax return,7 amounted to P144,253,229.78, which, when compared to its claimed total credits and tax payments of P217,552,122.38, resulted to a credit balance in its favor in the amount of P73,298,892.60.8 This credit balance was carried-over to cover tax liability for the years 1992 to 1996, but, as PNB alleged, was never applied owing to the bank’s negative tax position for the said inclusive years, having incurred losses during the 4-year period.

16

Page 17: Remedies Under the NIRC

On July 28, 1997, PNB wrote then BIR Commissioner Liwayway Vinzons-Chato, Attention: Appellate Division, to inform her about the above developments and to reiterate its request for the issuance of a TCC, this time for the "unutilized balance of its advance payment made in 1991 amounting to P73,298,892.60".9 This request was forwarded for review and further processing to the Office of the Deputy Commissioner for Legal and Inspection Group, Lilian B. Hefti, and then to the BIR’s Large Taxpayers Service.In a letter dated July 26, 2000, PNB sought reconsideration of the decision of Deputy Commissioner Hefti not to take cognizance of the bank’s claim for tax credit certificate on the ground that the jurisdiction of the Appellate Division is limited to claims for tax refund and credit "involving erroneous or illegal collection of taxes whenever there are questions of law and/or facts and does not include claims for refund of advance payment, pursuant to Revenue Administrative Order [RAO] No. 7-95 dated October 10, 1995."10 In her letter-reply dated August 8, 2008,11 Deputy Commissioner Hefti denied PNB’s request for reconsideration with the following explanations:In reply, please be advised that upon review . . . of your case, this Office finds that the same presents no legal question for resolution. Rather, what is involved is the verification of factual matters, i.e., the existence of material facts to establish your entitlement to refund. Such facts were initially verified through the proper audit of your refund case by the investigating unit under the functional control and supervision of the Deputy Commissioner, Operations Group of this Bureau. It is therefore right and proper for the Operations Group to review, confirm and/or pass judgment upon the findings of the unit under it.At any rate, sound management practices demand that issues as crucial as refund cases be subjected to complete staff work. There might be a little delay in the transition of cases but expect the new procedures to be well-established in no time. Allow us, however, to allay your concern about delayed processing of your claim. In fact, the undersigned has made representations with the Operations Group about your case and if you would check the status of your case again, you will find that the same has been duly acted upon." (Emphasis supplied)On August 14, 2001, PNB again wrote the BIR requesting that it be allowed to apply its unutilized advance tax payment of P73,298,892.60 to the bank’s future gross receipts tax liability.12

Replying, the BIR Commissioner denied PNB’s claim for tax credit for the following reasons stated in his letter of May 21, 2002, to wit:13

1. The amount subject of claim for [TCC] is being carried over from your 1991 to 1996 Annual Income Tax Returns. xxx. To grant your claim would result into granting it twice – first for tax carry over as shown in your 1991 amended Income Tax Return and second for granting a tax credit.2. When you requested for a refund on April 19, 1991, reiterated on April 29, 1991 and again on May 14, 1991 on alleged excess income taxes, the same was considered premature since the determination . . . of your income tax liability can only be ascertained upon filing of your Final or Adjusted Income Tax Return for 1991 on or before April 15, 1992.3. When you carried over the excess tax payments from 1991 to 1996 Annual Income Tax Return, you had already abandoned your original intention of claiming for a [TCC]. Furthermore, the 1991 amended Income Tax Return you filed on April 14, 1994 clearly showed that the amount being claimed has already been applied as tax credit against your 1992 income tax liability.4. Although there was already a recommendation for the issuance of a [TCC] by the Chief, Appellate Division and concurred in by the Assistant Commissioner, Legal Service, the recommendation was for . . . year 1992 and not for the taxable year 1991, which is the taxable year involved in this case.5. Even if you reiterated your claim for tax credit certificate when you filed your claim on July 28, 1997, the same has already prescribed on the ground that it was filed beyond the two (2) year prescriptive period as provided for under Section 204 of NIRC. [Words in bracket and emphasis added]On June 20, 2002, PNB, via a petition for review, appealed the denial action of the BIR Commissioner to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). There, its appellate recourse was docketed as C.T.A. Case No. 6487.The Revenue Commissioner filed a motion to dismiss PNB’s aforementioned petition on ground of prescription under the 1977 National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC)14. To this motion, PNB interposed an opposition, citingCIR vs. Philippine American Life Insurance Co.15

In its Resolution of October 10, 2002,16 the CTA granted the Commissioner’s motion to dismiss and, accordingly, denied PNB’s petition for review, pertinently stating as follows:To reiterate, both the claim for refund and the subsequent appeal to this court must be filed within the same two (2)-year period [provided in Sec. 230 of the NIRC]. This is not subject to qualification. The court is bereft of any jurisdiction or authority to hear the instant Petition for Review, considering that the above stated action for refund was filed beyond the two (2)-year prescriptive period as allowed under the Tax Code. (Words in bracket added)

PNB’s motion for reconsideration was denied by the tax court in its subsequent Resolution of March 20, 2003.17

In time, PNB filed a petition for review with the Court of Appeals (CA), thereat docketed as  CA-G.R. SP No. 76488, arguing that the applicability of the two (2)-year prescriptive period is not jurisdictional and that said rule admits of certain exceptions.18 Following the filing by the Commissioner Internal Revenue of his Comment to PNB’s petition in CA-G.R. in SP No. 76488, respondent PNB filed a Supplement to its Petition for Review.19

In the herein assailed Decision dated October 14, 2003,20 the appellate court reversed the ruling of the CTA, disposing as follows:WHEREFORE, premises considered, the present petition is hereby GIVEN DUE COURSE. Consequently, the assailed Resolutions dated October 10, 2002 and March 30, 2003 of the Court of Tax Appeals in C.T.A. Case No. 6487 are hereby ANNULLED and SET ASIDE. The case is hereby REMANDED to the respondent Commissioner for issuance with deliberate dispatch of the tax credit certificate after completion of processing of petitioner’s claim/request by the concerned BIR officer/s as to the correct amount of tax credit to which petitioner is entitled.No pronouncements as to costs.SO ORDERED.In gist, the appellate court predicated its disposition on the following main premises:1. Considering the "special circumstance" that the tax credit PNB has been seeking is to be sourced not from any tax erroneously or illegally collected but from advance income tax payment voluntarily made in response to then President Aquino’s call to generate more revenues for the government, in no way can the amount of P180 million advanced by PNB in 1991 be considered as erroneously or illegally paid tax.21

2. The BIR is deemed to have waived the two (2)-year prescriptive period when its officials led the PNB to believe that its request for tax credit had not yet prescribed since the matter was not being treated as an ordinary claim for tax refund/credit or a simple case of excess payment.3. CIR vs. Philippine American Life Insurance Co.22 instructs that even if the two (2)-year prescriptive period under the Tax Code had already lapsed, the same is not jurisdictional, and may be suspended for reasons of equity and other special circumstances. PNB’s failure to apply the advance income tax payment due to its negative tax liability in the succeeding taxable years i.e., 1992-1996, should not be subject to the two (2)-year limitation as to bar its claim for tax credit. The advance income tax payment, made as it were under special circumstances, warrants a suspension of the two (2)-year limitation, underscoring the fact that PNB’s claim is not even a simple case of excess payment.In time, the BIR Commissioner moved for a reconsideration, but its motion was denied by the appellate court in its equally challenged Resolution of January 26, 2004.23

Hence, the Commissioner’s present recourse on the following substantive submissions:1. A prior tax assessment before respondent PNB can apply for tax credit is unnecessary;2. PNB’s letter dated April 19, 29 and May 14, 1991 cannot be legally interpreted as claims for refund or tax credit as required by the NIRC;3. PNB’s claim for tax credit is barred by prescription; and4. The equitable principle of estoppel does bar the BIR petitioner from collecting taxes due. 24

Petitioner first scores the CA for concluding that "the amount of advance income tax payment voluntarily remitted to the BIR by the [respondent] was not a consequence of a prior tax assessment or computation by the taxpayer based on business income" and, therefore, it cannot "be treated as similar to those national revenue taxes erroneously, illegally or wrongfully paid as to be automatically covered by the two (2)-year limitation under Sec. 230 [of the NIRC] for the right to its recovery." Petitioner invokes the all too-familiar principle that the collection of taxes, being the lifeblood of the nation,25 should be summary and with the least interference from the courts.Pressing its point, petitioner asserts that what transpired under the premises is a case of excessive collection not arising from an erroneous, illegal of wrongful assessment and collection. According to petitioner, respondent PNB, after making a prepayment of taxes in 1991, had realized, upon filing, in 1992, of its 1991 final annual income tax return, the excess payment by simple process of mathematical computation; hence, it was unnecessary to make any assessment of overpaid taxes. Moreover, petitioner points out that the tenor of PNB’s letters of April 19, 29, and May 14, 1991 26 indicated a mere request for an issuance of a TCC covering the advance payments of taxes, not a claim for refund or tax credit of overpaid national internal revenue taxes.Citing Revenue Regulation No. 10-77, petitioner likewise argues that any excess or overpaid income tax for a given taxable year may be carried to the succeeding taxable year only. It cannot, petitioner expounds, go beyond, as what respondent PNB attempted to do in 1997, when, after realizing the

17

Page 18: Remedies Under the NIRC

inapplicability of the excess carry-forward scheme for its 1992 income tax liabilities owing to its negative tax position for the 1992 to 1996 tax period, it belatedly requested for a TCC issuance.Lastly, petitioner urges the Court to make short shrift of the invocation of equity and estoppel, on the postulate that the erroneous application and enforcement of tax laws by public officers does not preclude the subsequent correct application of such laws.27

In its Comment, respondent PNB contends that its claim for tax credit did not arise from overpayment resulting from erroneous, illegal or wrongful collection of tax. And obviously having in mind the holding of this Court in Juan Luna Subdivision Inc. vs. Sarmiento,28 respondent stresses that its P180 Million advance income tax payment for 1991 partakes of the nature of a deposit made in anticipation of taxes not yet due or levied. Accordingly, respondent adds, the P180 Million was strictly not a payment of a valid and existing tax liability, let alone an erroneous payment, the refund of which is governed by Section 230 of the NIRC.Taking a different tack, respondent PNB would also argue that, even assuming, in gratia argumenti that the two (2)-year limitation in Section 230 of the NIRC is of governing application, still the prescriptive period set forth therein is not jurisdictional. The suspension of the statutory limitation in this case, PNB adds, is justified under exceptional circumstance.We rule for respondent PNB.As may be recalled, both the CTA’s and the BIR’s refusal to grant PNB’s claim for refund or credit was based on the proposition that such claim was time-barred. On the other hand, the CA rejected both the CTA’s and BIR’s stance for reasons as shall be explained shortly.As we see it then, the core issue in this case pivots on the applicability hereto of the two (2)-year prescriptive period under in Section 230 (now Sec. 229) of the NIRC, reading:"SEC. 230. Recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. – No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any national internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected , . . , or of any sum, alleged to have been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Commissioner; but such suit or proceeding may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum has been paid under protest or duress.In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two [(2)] years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment: Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously paid. (Underscoring added.)Here, respondent PNB requested the BIR to issue a TCC on the remaining balance of the advance income tax payment it made in 1991. It should be noted that the request was made considering that, while PNB carried over such credit balance to the succeeding taxable years, i.e., 1992 to 1996, its negative tax position during said tax period prevented it from actually applying the credit balance of P73, 298,892.60. It is fairly correct to say then that the claim for tax credit was specifically pursued to enable the respondent bank to utilize the same for future tax liabilities. However, petitioner ruled that the claim in question is time-barred, the bank having filed such claim only in 1997, or more than two (2) years from 1992 when the overpayment of annual income tax for 1991 was realized by the bank and the amount of excess payment ascertained with the filing of its final 1991 income tax return.In rejecting petitioner’s ruling, as seconded by the CTA, the CA stated that PNB’s request for issuance of a tax credit certificate on the balance of its advance income tax payment cannot be treated as a simple case of excess payment as to be automatically covered by the two (2)-year limitation in Section 230, supra of the NIRC.We agree with the Court of Appeals.Section 230 of the Tax Code, as couched, particularly its statute of limitations component, is, in context, intended to apply to suits for the recovery of internal revenue taxes or sums erroneously, excessively, illegally or wrongfully collected.Black defines the term erroneous or illegal tax as one levied without statutory authority.29 In the strict legal viewpoint, therefore, PNB’s claim for tax credit did not proceed from, or is a consequence of overpayment of tax erroneously or illegally collected. It is beyond cavil that respondent PNB issued to the BIR the check for P180 Million in the concept of tax payment in advance, thus eschewing the notion that there was error or illegality in the payment. What in effect transpired when PNB wrote its July 28, 1997 letter30 was that respondent sought the application of amounts advanced to the BIR to future annual income tax liabilities, in view of its inability to carry-over the remaining amount of such advance payment to the four (4) succeeding taxable years, not having incurred income tax liability during that period.

The instant case ought to be distinguished from a situation where, owing to net losses suffered during a taxable year, a corporation was also unable to apply to its income tax liability taxes which the law requires to be withheld and remitted. In the latter instance, such creditable withholding taxes, albeit also legally collected, are in the nature of "erroneously collected taxes" which entitled the corporate taxpayer to a refund under Section 230 of the Tax Code. So it is that in Citibank, N.A. vs. Court of Appeals31, we held:The taxes thus withheld and remitted are provisional in nature. We repeat: five percent of the rental income withheld and remitted to the BIR pursuant to Rev. Reg. No. 13-78 is, unlike the withholding of final taxes on passive incomes, a creditable withholding tax; that is, creditable against income tax liability if any, for that taxable year.In CIR vs. TMX Sales, Inc., this Court ruled that the payments of quarterly income taxes (per Section 68, NIRC) should be considered mere installments on the annual tax due. These quarterly tax payments . . . should be treated as advances or portions of the annual income tax due, to be adjusted at the end of the calendar or fiscal year. The same holds true in the case of the withholding of creditable tax at source. Withholding taxes are "deposits" which are subject to adjustments at the proper time when the complete tax liability is determined.In this case, the payments of the withholding taxes for 1979 and 1980 were creditable to the income tax liability, if any, of petitioner-bank, determined after the filing of the corporate income tax returns on April 15, 1980 and April 15, 1981. As petitioner posted net losses in its 1979 and 1980 returns, it was not liable for any income taxes. Consequently and clearly, the taxes withheld during the course of the taxable year, while collected legally under the aforecited revenue regulation, became untenable and took on the nature of erroneously collected taxes at the end of the taxable year. (Underscoring added)Analyzing the underlying reason behind the advance payment made by respondent PNB in 1991, the CA held that it would be improper to treat the same as erroneous, wrongful or illegal payment of tax within the meaning of Section 230 of the Tax Code. So that even if the respondent’s inability to carry-over the remaining amount of its advance payment to taxable years 1992 to 1996 resulted in excess credit, it would be inequitable to impose the two (2)-year prescriptive period in Section 230 as to bar PNB’s claim for tax credit to utilize the same for future tax liabilities. We quote with approval the CA’s disquisition on this point:Thus, in no sense can the subject amount of advance income tax voluntarily remitted to the BIR by the [respondent], not as a consequence of prior tax assessment or computation by the taxpayer based on business income, be treated as similar to those national revenue taxes erroneously, illegally or wrongfully paid as to be automatically covered by the two (2)-year limitation under Sec. 230 for the right to its recovery. When the P180 million advance income tax payment was tendered by [respondent], no tax had been assessed or due, or actually imposed and collected by the BIR. Neither can such payment be considered as illegal having been made in response to a call of patriotic duty to help the national government …. We therefore hold that the tax credit sought by [respondent] is not simply a case of excess payment, but rather for the application of the balance of advance income tax payment for subsequent taxable years after failure or impossibility to make such application or carry over the preceding four (4)-year period when no tax liability was incurred by petitioner due to losses in its operations. It is truly inequitable to strictly impose the two (2)-year prescriptive period as to legally bar any request for such tax credit certificate considering the special circumstances under which the advance income tax payment was made and the unexpected event (four years of business losses) which prevented such application or carry over. Ironically, both the [petitioner] and CTA would fault the [respondent] for electing to credit or carry over the excess amount of tax payment advanced instead of choosing to refund any such excess amount, holding that such decision on the part of petitioner caused the two (2)-year period to lapse without the petitioner filing such a request for the issuance of a tax credit certificate. They emphasized that the advance tax payment was made with the understanding that any excess amount will be either carried over to the next taxable year or refunded. It appears then that the request for issuance of a tax credit certificate was arbitrarily interpreted by respondent as a simple claim for refund instead of a request for application of the balance (excess amount) to tax liability for the succeeding taxable years, as was the original intention of [respondent] when it tendered the advance payment in 1991."32 (Emphasis in the original; words in bracket added)Petitioner insists that a prior tax assessment in this case was unnecessary, the excess tax payment having already been ascertained by the end of 1992 upon the filing by respondent of its adjusted final return. Thus, petitioner adds, the two (2)-year prescriptive period to recover said excess credit balance had begun to run from the accomplishment of the said final return and, ergo, PNB’s claim for tax credit asserted in 1997 is definitely belated. Additionally, petitioner, citing Revenue Regulation No. 10-77,

18

Page 19: Remedies Under the NIRC

contends that the carrying forward of any excess or overpaid income tax for a given taxable year is limited to the succeeding taxable year only.We do not agree.Revenue Regulation No. 10-7733 governs the method of computing corporate quarterly income tax on a cumulative basis. Section 7 thereof provides:SEC. 7. Filing of final or adjustment return and final payment of income tax. -- A final or an adjustment return . . . covering the total taxable income of the corporation for the preceding calendar or fiscal year shall be filed on or before the 15th day of the fourth month following the close of the calendar or fiscal year. xxxx. The amount of income tax to be paid shall be the balance of the total income tax shown on the final or adjustment return after deducting therefrom the total quarterly income taxes paid during the preceding first three quarters of the same calendar or fiscal year."Any excess of the total quarterly payments over the actual income tax computed and shown in the adjustment or final corporate income tax return shall either (a) be refunded to the corporation, or (b) may be credited against the estimated quarterly income tax liabilities for the quarters of the succeeding taxable year. The corporation must signify in its annual corporate adjustment return its intention whether to request for the refund of the overpaid income or claim for automatic tax credit to be applied against its income tax liabilities for the quarters of the succeeding taxable year by filling the appropriate box on the corporate tax return. (B.I.R. Form No. 1702) [Emphasis added]As can be gleaned from the above, the mandate of Rev. Reg. No. 10-77 is hardly of any application to PNB’s advance payment which, needless to stress, are not "quarterly payments" reflected in the adjusted final return, but a lump sum payment to cover future tax obligations. Neither can such advance lump sum payment be considered overpaid income tax for a given taxable year, so that the carrying forward of any excess or overpaid income tax for a given taxable year is limited to the succeeding taxable year only.34 Clearly, limiting the right to carry-over the balance of respondent’s advance payment only to the immediately succeeding taxable year would be unfair and improper considering that, at the time payment was made, BIR was put on due notice of PNB’s intention to apply the entire amount to its future tax obligations.In Commissioner vs. Phi-am Life35, the Court ruled that an availment of a tax credit due for reasons other than the erroneous or wrongful collection of taxes may have a different prescriptive period. Absent any specific provision in the Tax Code or special laws, that period would be ten (10) years under Article 1144 of the Civil Code. Significantly, Commissioner vs. Phil-Am is partly a reiteration of a previous holding that even if the two (2)-year prescriptive period, if applicable, had already lapsed, the same is not jurisdictional36 and may be suspended for reasons of equity and other special circumstances.37

While perhaps not in all fours because it involved the refund of overpayment due to misinterpretation of the law on franchise, our ruling in Panay Electric Co. vs. Collector of Internal Revenue38, is apropos. There, the Court stated:"xxx(L)egally speaking, the decision of the Tax Court [on the two-year prescriptive period for tax refund] is therefore correct, being in accordance with law. However, one’s conscience does not and cannot rest easy on this strict application of the law, considering the special circumstances that surround this case. Because of his erroneous interpretation of the law on franchise taxes, the Collector, from the year 1947 had illegally collected from petitioner the respectable sum of . . . . From a moral standpoint, the Government would be enriching itself of this amount at the expense of the taxpayer. (Words in bracket added and underscoring added.)Like the CA, this Court perceives no compelling reason why the principle enunciated in Panay Electric andCommissioner vs. Phil-Am Life should not be applied in this case, more so since the amount over which tax credit is claimed was theoretically booked as advance income tax payment. It bears stressing that respondent PNB remitted the P180 Million in question as a measure of goodwill and patriotism, a gesture noblesse oblige, so to speak, to help the cash-strapped national government. It would thus indeed, be unfair, as the CA correctly observed, to leave respondent PNB to suffer losing millions of pesos advanced by it for future tax liabilities. The cut becomes all the more painful when it is considered that PNB’s failure to apply the balance of such advance income tax payment from 1992 to 1996 was, to repeat, due to business downturn experienced by the bank so that it incurred no tax liability for the period.The rule of long standing is that the Court will not set aside lightly the conclusions reached by the CTA which, by the very nature of its functions, is dedicated exclusively to the resolution of tax problems and has, accordingly, developed an expertise on the subject, unless there has been an abuse or improvident exercise of authority.39 It is likewise settled that to a claimant rests the onus to establish the factual basis

of his or her claim for tax credit or refund.40 In this case, however, petitioner does not dispute that a portion of the P180 Million PNB remitted to the BIR in 1991 as advance payment remains unutilized for the purpose for which it was intended in the first place. But petitioner asserts that respondent’s right to recover the same is already time-barred. The CTA upheld the position of petitioner. The CA ruled otherwise. We find the CA’s position more in accord with the facts on record and is consistent with applicable laws and jurisprudence.Verily, the suspension of the two (2)-year prescriptive period is warranted not solely by the objective or purpose pursuant to which respondent PNB made the advance income tax payment in 1991. Records show that petitioner’s very own conduct led the bank to believe all along that its original intention to apply the advance payment to its future income tax obligations will be respected by the BIR. Notwithstanding respondent PNB’s failure to request for tax credit after incurring negative tax position in 1992, up to taxable year 1996, there appears to be a valid reason to assume that the agreed carrying forward of the balance of the advance payment extended to succeeding taxable years, and not only in 1992. Thus, upon posting a net income in 1997 and regaining a profitable business operation, respondent bank promptly sought the issuance of a TCC for the reason that its credit balance of P73, 298,892.60 remained unutilized. If ever, petitioner’s pose about respondent PNB never having made a written claim for refund only serves to buttress the latter’s position that it was not out to secure a refund or recover the aforesaid amount, but for the BIR to issue a TCC so it can apply the same to its future tax obligations.Lest it be overlooked, petitioner peremptorily denied the request for tax credit on the ground of its having been filed beyond the two (2)-year prescriptive period. In the same breath, however, petitioner appears to have glossed over an incident which amounts to an earlier BIR ruling that "there is no legal question to be resolved but only a factual investigation" in the processing of PNB’s claim. Even as petitioner concluded such administrative investigation, it did not deny the request for issuance of a tax credit certificate on any factual finding, such as the veracity of alleged business losses in the taxable years 1992 to 1996, during which the respondent bank alleged the credit balance was not applied. Lastly, there is no indication that petitioner considered respondent’s request as an ordinary claim for refund, the very reason why the same was referred by the BIR for processing to the Operations Group of the Bureau.Hence, no reversible error was committed by the CA in holding that, upon basic considerations of equity and fairness, respondent’s request for issuance of a tax credit certificate should not be subject to the two (2)-year limitation in Section 230 of the NIRC.With the foregoing disquisitions, the Court finds it unnecessary to delve on the question of whether or not mistakes of tax officers constitute a bar to collection of taxes by the BIR Commissioner.The procedural issue presently raised by petitioner, i.e., respondent PNB’s alleged non-compliance with the forum shopping rule when its petition for review filed with the CTA did not contain the requisite authority of PNB Vice President Ligaya R. Gagolinan to sign the certification, need not detain us long.Petitioner presently faults the CA for not having taken notice that PNB’s initiatory pleading before the CTA suffers from an infirmity that justifies the dismissal thereof. But it is evident that the issue of forum shopping is being raised for the first time in this appellate proceedings. Accordingly, the Court loathes to accommodate petitioner’s urging for the dismissal of respondent’s basic claim on the forum-shopping angle. As earlier ruled by this Court, a party ought to invoke the issue of forum shopping, assuming its presence, at the first opportunity in his motion to dismiss or similar pleading filed in the trial court. Else, he is barred from raising the ground of forum shopping in the Court of Appeals and in this Court. 41 So it must be here.WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED for lack of merit and the assailed decision and resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 76488 AFFIRMED.

------------

CIR v. TMX Sales, Inc.Jan. 15, 1992Gutierrez, Jr., J.Facts: TMX Sales filed its quarterly income tax return for the first quarter of 1981 and consequently paid an income tax on May 15, 1981. During the subsequent quarters, it suffered losses so that when it filed on April 15, 1982, its Annual Income Tax Return for the year ended December 31, 1981, declared a net loss of P6, 156, 525.00On July 9, 1982, TMX thru its external auditor, SGV & Co. filed with the Appellate Division of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) a claim for refund in the amount of P247, 010.00 representing overpaid income tax.

19

Page 20: Remedies Under the NIRC

Claim was not acted upon by the CIR and on March 14, 1984, TMX filed a petition for review before the Court of Tax Appeals against CIR, praying that petitioner be ordered to refund to TMX the said amount representing overpaid income tax. CIR responded by saying that petitioner TMX Sales is already barred from claiming the same considering that more than 2 years had already elapsed between the payment (May 15, 1981) and the filing of the claim in Court (March 14, 1984).On April 29, 1988, Court of Tax Appeals granted the petition of TMX and ordered CIR to refund the amount claimed. The Tax Court viewed the quarterly income tax paid as a portion or instalment of the total annual income tax due. In its assailed decision, it said (this isn’t the whole thing, but just what seem to be the most important parts):

“When a tax is paid in instalments, the prescriptive period of 2 year provided in Sec. 306 (now Sec. 292) of the Revenue Code should be counted from the date of the final payment or last instalment. This rule proceeds from the theory that in contemplation of tax laws, there is no payment until the whole or entire tax liability is completely paid. In this regard the word ‘tax’ or words ‘the tax’ in statutory provisions comparable to Sec. 306 of our Revenue Code have been uniformly held to refer to the entire tax and not a portion thereof and the vocable ‘payment of tax’ within statutes requiring refund claim, refer to the date when all the tax was paid, not when a portion was paid.”

Petitioner CIR now seeks reversal of above decision.

Issue: Does the 2-year prescriptive period to claim a refund of erroneously collected tax provided for in Sec. 292 (now Sec. 230) of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) commence to run from the date the quarterly income tax was paid, as contended by petitioner, or from the date of filing of the Final Adjustment Return (final payment) as claimed by private respondent?

Ruling: Petition denied. Decision of the Court of Tax Appeals dated April 29, 1988 is affirmed.Reasoning: Sec. 292, par. 2 of the National Internal Revenue Code provides that

“In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment.”

Petitioner contends that the basis in computing the two-year period of prescription should be May 15, 1981, the date when the quarterly income tax was paid and not April 15, 1982, when the Final Adjustment Return for the year ended December 1981 was filed. Sec. 292 of the NIRC should be interpreted in relation to the other provisions of the Tax Code in order to give effect the legislative intent and to avoid an application of the law which made lead to inconvenience and absurdity. Court cited People v. Rivera, which stated that statutes should receive a sensible construction, such as will give effect to the legislative intention and so as to avoid an unjust or an absurd conclusion. Where there is ambiguity, such interpretation as will avoid inconvenience and absurdity is to be adopted.Courts must give effect to the general legislative intent that can be discovered from or is unravelled by the four corners of the statute, and in order to discover said intent, the whole statute, and not only a part thereof, should be considered. Every section, provision or clause of the statute must be expounded by reference to each other in order to arrive at the effect contemplated by the legislature. The intention of the legislator must be ascertained from the whole text of the law and every part of the act is to be taken into view.Thus, in resolving the case, the Court considered not only Sec. 292 but also other provisions of the Tax Code. Sec. 292 provides a 2 year prescriptive period to file a suit for a refund of a tax erroneously or illegally paid, counted from the time the tax was paid. Sec. 85 provides for a method of computing corporate quarterly income tax which is on a cumulative basis while Sec. 87 requires the filing of an adjustment returns and final payment of income tax. In the case, the amount claimed by TMX Sales based on its Adjustment Return is equivalent to the tax paid during the first quarter. A literal application of Sec. 292 would thus pose no problem as the two-year prescriptive period from the time the quarterly income tax was paid can easily be determined. However, if the quarter in which overpayment is made cannot be ascertained, then a literal application would lead to absurdity and inconvenience.The most reasonable and logical application of the law would be to compute the 2-year prescriptive period at the time of filing the Final Adjustment Return or the Annual Income Tax Return, when it can

finally be ascertained if the taxpayer has still to pay additional income tax or if he is entitled to a refund of overpaid income tax. Also, Sec. 321 of the NIRC requires that the books of accounts of companies or persons with gross quarterly sales or earnings exceeding P25, 000 be audited and examined yearly by an independent Certified Public Accountant their income tax returns be accompanied by relevant documents. It is generally recognized that before an accountant can make a certification on the financial statements or render and auditor’s opinion, an audit of the books of accounts has to be conducted in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.Since the audit, as required by Sec. 321, is to be conducted yearly, then it is the Final Adjustment Return, where the figures of the gross receipts and deductions have been audited and adjusted, that is truly reflective of the results of the operations of a business enterprise. Thus, it is only when the Adjustment Return covering the whole year is filed that the taxpayer would know whether a tax is still due or a refund can be claimed based on the adjusted and audited figures. The filing of quarterly income tax returns and payment should only be considered mere instalments of the annual tax due. Consequently, the two-year prescriptive period provided in Sec. 292 of the Tax Code should be computed from the time of the filing of the Adjustment Return or Annual Income Tax Return and final payment of tax.In this case, TMX filed a suit for a refund on March 14, 1984. Since the 2-year period should be counted from the filing of Adjustment Return on April 15, 1982, TMX is not yet barred by prescription. ------------------

ACCRA Investments Corporation v. Court of AppealsFacts: ACCRA INVESTMENTS (ACCRAIN) is a domestic corporation engaged in the business of real estate investment and management consultancy. ACCRAIN filed with the Bureau of Internal Revenue its annual corporate income tax return for the calendar year reporting a net loss of P2,957,142.00 on April 15, 1982. ACCRAIN declared as creditable all taxes withheld at source by various withholding agents which withholding agents aforestated paid and remitted the above amounts representing taxes on rental, commission and consultancy income of the petitioner corporation to the Bureau of Internal Revenue. ACCRAIN filed a claim for refund. Pending action of the respondent Commissioner on its claim for refund, the petitioner corporation, on April 13, 1984, filed a petition for review with the respondent Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA dismissed the case for being filed out of time and the MR was likewise denied. A petition for review was submitted to the SC and the SC referred the case to the CA. The CA affirmed decision of the CTA. 

Issue: Whether or not the claim for refund was filed on time 

Held: YES. Crucial in the resolution of the instant case is the interpretation of the phraseology "from the date of payment of the tax" in the context of Section 230 on Recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. 

A correct application of the Gibbs case according to the court is that “a taxpayer whose income is withheld at source will be deemed to have paid his tax liability at the end of the tax year. It is from when the same falls due at the his latter date then, or when the two-year prescriptive period under Section 306 of the Revenue Code starts to run with respect to payments effected through the withholding tax system..” 

The aforequoted ruling presents two alternative reckoning dates, (1) the end of the tax year; and (2) when the tax liability falls due. In the instant case, it is undisputed that the petitioner corporation's withholding agents had paid the corresponding taxes withheld at source to the Bureau of Internal Revenue from February to December 1981. ACCRAIN is not claiming a refund of overpaid withholding taxes, per se. It is asking for the recovery the refundable or creditable amount determined upon the petitioner corporation's filing of the its final adjustment tax return on or before 15 April 1982 when its tax liability for the year 1981 fell due. The petitioner corporation's taxable year is on a calendar year basis, hence, with respect to the 1981 taxable year, ACCRAIN had until 15 April 1982 within which to file its final adjustment return. The petitioner corporation duly complied with this requirement 

Anent claims for refund, section 8 of Revenue Regulation No. 13-78 issued by the Bureau of Internal Revenue requires that: 

20

Page 21: Remedies Under the NIRC

Section 8. Claims for tax credit or refund — Claims for tax credit or refund of  income tax deducted and withheld on income payments shall be given due course only when it is shown on the return that the income payment received was declared as part of the gross income and the fact of withholding is established by a copy of the statement, duly issued by the payor to the payee (BIR Form No. 1743-A) showing the amount paid and the amount of tax withheld therefrom. 

The term "return" in the case of domestic corporations like ACCRAIN refers to the final adjustment return. It bears emphasis at this point that the rationale in computing the two-year prescriptive period with respect to the petitioner corporation's claim for refund from the time it filed its final adjustment return is the fact that it was only then that ACCRAIN could ascertain whether it made profits or incurred losses in its business operations. The "date of payment", therefore, in ACCRAIN's case was when its tax liability, if any, fell due upon its filing of its final adjustment return on April 15, 1982.---------------------------

Citibank N.A. v. Court of AppealsFacts: Citibank N.A. Philippine Branch (CITIBANK) is a foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines. In 1979 and 1980, its tenants withheld and paid to the Bureau of Internal Revenue the taxes on rents due to Citibank, pursuant to Section 1(c) of the Expanded Withholding Tax Regulations.On April 15, 1980, Citibank field its corporate income tax returns for the year and ended December 31, 1979 showing a net loss of P74,854,916.00 and its tax credits totaled P6,257,780.00, even without including the amounts withheld on rental income under the Expanded Withholding Tax System, the same not having been utilized or applied for the reason that the year’s operation resulted in a loss. The taxes thus withheld by the tenants from rentals paid to Citibank in 1979 were not included as tax credits although a rental income amounting to P7,796,811.00 was included in its income declared for the year ended December 31, 1979.’For the year ended December 31, 1980, Citibank’s corporate income tax returns, filed on April 15, 1981, showed a net loss P77,071,790.00 for income tax purposes. Its available tax credit at the end of 1980 amounting to P11,532,855.00 was not utilized or applied. The said available tax credits did not include the amounts withheld by Citibank’s tenants from rental payment sin 1980 but the rental payments for that year were declared as part of its gross income included in its annual income tax returns.

On October 31, 1981, Citibank submitted its claim for refund of the aforesaid amounts of P270,160.56 and P298,829.29, respectively or a total of P568,989.85; and on October 12, 1981 filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals concerning subject claim for tax refund.On August 30, 1981, the CTA adjudged Citibank’s entitlement to thetax refund sought for, representing the 5% tax withheld and paid on Citibank’s rental income for 1979 and 1980. The Court of Tax Appeals, rejected Respondent CIR’s argument that the claim was not seasonably filed. Not satisfied the Commissioner appealed to the Court of Appeals, CA ruled that Citibank N.A. Philippine branch, entitled to a tax refund/credit in the amount of P569,989.85, representing the 5% withheld tax in Citibank’s rental income for the years 1979 and 1980 is REVERSED. Motion for Reconsideration of the petitioner bank was denied. Hence, this petition.

Issue: Whether or not income taxes remitted partially on a periodic or quarterly basis should be credited or refunded to the taxpayer on the basis of the taxpayer’s final adjusted returns.

Held: In several cases, we have already ruled that income taxesremitted partially on a periodic or quarterly basis should be credited or refunded to the taxpayer on the basis of the taxpayer’s final adjusted returns, not on such periodic or quarterly basis. When applied to taxpayers filing income tax returns on a quarterly basis, the date ofpayment mentioned in Sec. 230 must be deemed to be qualified by Sec. 68 and 69 of the present. Tax Code. It may be observed that although quarterly taxes due are required to be paid within 60 days from the close of each quarter, the fact that the amount shall be deducted from the tax due for the succeeding quarter shows that until a final adjustment return shall have been filed, the taxes paid in the preceding quarters are merely partial taxes due from a corporation. Neither amount can serve as the final figure to quantify what is due the government nor what should be refunded to be corporation. This interpretation may be gleaned from the last paragraph of Sec. 69 of the Tax Code which provides that the refundable amount, in case arefund is due a corporation, is that amount which is shown on its finaladjustment return and not on its quarterly returns.

--------------

COMMISSIONER V. PALANCA

FACTSJuly 1950, Don Carlos Palanca, Sr., donated to his son Carlos Jr., shares of stock in La Tondeña, Inc. amounting to 12,500 shares. Carlos Jr. failed to file a return on the donation within the statutory period so Carlos Jr. was assessed P97,691.23 (gift tax), P24,442.81 (25% surcharge), P47,868.70 (interest), which he paid on June 22, 1955.March 1,1956, Carlos Jr. filed with BIR his ITR for 1955 claiming a deduction for interest of P9,706.45 and reporting a taxable income of P65,982.12. He was assessed P21,052.01 as income tax.November 1956, Carlos Jr. filed an amended return for 1955, claiming an additional deduction of P47,868.70 (allegedly the interest paid on the donee’s gift tax based on Sec.30(b)(1) of the Tax Code) so taxable income is P18,113.42 (not P65,982.12) and tax due thereon in sum of P3,167.00. He claimed for a refund of P17,885.01 (P21,052.01 - P3,167.00)– BIR denied Carlos Jr. reiterated claim for refund, BIR deniedBIR considered the donation by Carlos Sr. as a transfer in contemplation of death so Carlos Jr. was assessed P191,591.62 as estate and inheritance taxes. Carlos paid P17,002.74 on June 22, 1955 as gift tax (includes interest and surcharge) which was applied to his estate and inheritance tax liability. Petitioner paid P60,581.80 as interest for delinquency.-August 1958, Carlos Jr. filed again an amended ITR for 1955 claiming the following: As interest deductions: P9,706.45 (as in the original ITR) + P60,581.80 (interest on the estate and inheritance taxes); Net Taxable income: P5,400.32; Income tax due: P428.00; claimed a refund of P20,624.01 (P21,052.01 – P428) . Even before BIR ruled on his claim, Carlos Jr. filed petition for review before CTA-CTA: BIR refund Carlos P20,624.01

ISSUES1. WON there is a difference between “indebtedness” and “taxes” to determine the deductible interest (WON Palanca could claim interest deductions based on tax liability)2. WON claim for refund of Palanca already expired

HELD1. NO. Distinction became inconsequential. Interest on taxes should be considered as interests of indebtednessRatio. While the distinction between “taxes” and “debts” was recognized in this jurisdiction, the variance in their legal conception does not extend to the interests paid on them, at least insofar as Sec.30(b)(1) of the NIRC1 is concerned (which authorizes deduction from gross income of interest paid within the taxable year on indebtedness).Reasoning. CIR argues that Carlos Jr. cannot deduct the interest due to its tax liabilities from his gross income since it is not interest ON INDEBTEDNESS but interest on TAX (liabilities). -however, in CIR v. PRIETO (wherein deductions of interest on donor’s tax was allowed) it was held that the term “indebtedness” was defined as the unconditional and legally enforceable obligation for the payment of money. It Thus, it is apparent that a tax may be considered an indebtedness.

2. NORatio. Where the claim for refund was filed with the CTA even before it had been denied by the BIR, then the 30-day prescription period under Sec.11, RA 1124(25) did not even commence to run. Where the tax account was paid by installment, then the computation of the two-year prescriptive period under Sec. 306 of the Tax Code should be from the date of the last installmentReasoning. CIR argued that under Sec.11(may appeal to CTA within 30-days from receipt of decision or ruling), claim for refund already prescribed because outside 30-day period. Under Sec.306 of Tax Code (No suit/proceeding shall be begun for recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected after the expiration of 2years from the date of payment of the tax penalty) CIR claims that under Palanca’s

1

21

Page 22: Remedies Under the NIRC

withheld tax and under Receipt dated May 11, 1956, amounts paid by Carlos Jr. may no longer be refunded as it was filed in court only on August 13, 1958 (beyond 2yr period)-on 30-day period: did not even commence when case was filed because there was no final decision from BIR yet when Carlos Jr. filed case with CTA-on 2yr period: Palanca paid on installment. His last payment was on August 14, 1956. Therefore, since the period of counting should be from time of last installment, he still filed claim on time on August 13, 1958!

Disposition. WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is affirmed in full, without pronouncements on costs. ----------------CIR v. Philippine American Life Insurance Co., et alFACTS:On May 30, 1983, private respondent Philamlife paid to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) its first quarterly corporate income tax for Calendar Year (CY) 1983 amounting to P3,246,141.00. On August 29, 1983, it paid P396,874.00 for the Second Quarter of 1983. For the Third Quarter of 1983, private respondent declared a net taxable income of P2,515,671.00 and a tax due of P708,464.00. After crediting the amount of P3,899,525.00 it declared a refundable amount of P3,158,061.00. For its Fourth and final quarter ending December 31, private respondent suffered a loss and thereby had no income tax liability. In the return for that quarter, it declared a refund of P3,991,841.00 representing the first and second quarterly payments: P215,742.00 as withholding taxes on rental income for 1983 and P133,084.00 representing 1982 income tax refund applied as 1983 tax credit.In 1984, private respondent again suffered a loss and declared no income tax liability. However, it applied as tax credit for 1984, the amount of P3,991,841.00 representing its 1982 and 1983 overpaid income taxes and the amount of P250,867.00 as withholding tax on rental income for 1984.On September 26, 1984, private respondent filed a claim for its 1982 income tax refund of P133,084.00. On November 22, 1984, it filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals (C.T.A. Case No. 3868) with respect to its 1982 claim for refund of P133,084.00.On December 16, 1985, it filed another claim for refund with petitioners appellate division in the aggregate amount of P4,109,624.00.The issue in this case is the reckoning date of the two-year prescriptive period provided in Section 230 of the National Internal Revenue Code (formerly Section 292) which states that:

Recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. — No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any national internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or of any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority, or of any sum alleged to have been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Commissioner; but such suit or proceeding may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum has been paid under protest or duress.In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment:Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously paid.Forfeiture of refund. — A refund check or warrant issued in accordance with the pertinent provisions of this Code which shall remain unclaimed or uncashed within five (5) years from the date the said warrant or check was mailed or delivered shall be forfeited in favor of the government and the amount thereof shall revert to the General Fund.

Petitioner poses the following question: In a case such as this, where a corporate taxpayer remits/pays to the BIR tax withheld on income for the first quarter but whose business operations actually resulted in a loss for that year, as reflected in the Corporate Final Adjustment Return subsequently filed with the BIR, should not the running of the prescriptive period commence from the remittance/payment at the end of the first quarter of the tax withheld instead of from the filing of the Final Adjustment Return?In support of its contention, petitioner cites the case of Pacific Procon Ltd. v. Court of Tax Appeals, et a1. 2wherein the CTA denied therein petitioner's claim for refund after it construed Section 292 (now Section 230) of the NIRC to be mandatory and "not subject to any qualification," hence it applies regardless of the conditions under which payment may have been made. The Tax Court ruled:

Under Section 292 (formerly Section 306) of the National Internal Revenue Code, a claim for refund of a tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally collected shall be filed with the CIR within two

years from the date of payment of the tax, and that no suit or proceeding for refund shall be begun after the expiration of the said two-year period (Citation omitted). As a matter of fact, the said section further provides that: . . . In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two years from the date of payment of the tax or the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment.

Petitioner states that the phrase "regardless of supervening cause that may arise after payment" is an amendatory phrase under the said Section 292 which did not appear in Section 306 of the old Tax Code before it was amended by Presidential Decree No. 69, which became effective January 1, 1973. Petitioner argues that the incorporation of the said phrase did away with any other interpretation and, therefore, the reckoning period of prescription under Section 292 (now section 230) is from the date of payment of tax regardless of financial loss (the "supervening cause"). Thus, the claim for refund of the amounts of P3,246,141.00 and P396,874.00 paid on May 30, 1983 and August 29, 1983, respectively, has prescribed.We find petitioner's contentions to be unmeritorious.It is true that in the Pacific Procon case, we held that the right to bring an action for refund had prescribed, the tax having been found to have been paid at the end of the first quarter when the withholding tax corresponding thereto was remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue, not at the time of filing of the Final Adjustment Return in April of the following year.However, this case was overturned by the Court in CIR v. TMX Sales Incorporated and the Court of Tax Appeals, 3 wherein we said:

. . . in resolving the instant case, it is necessary that we consider not only Section 292 (now Section 230) of the National Internal Revenue Code but also the other provisions of the Tax Code, particularly Sections 84, 85 (now both incorporated as Section 68), Section 86 (now Section 70) and Section 87 (now Section 69) on Quarterly Corporate Income Tax Payment and Section 321 (now Section 232) on keeping of books of accounts. All these provisions of the Tax Code should be harmonized with each other.

Section 292 (now Section 230) stipulates that the two-year prescriptive period to claim refunds should be counted from date of payment of the tax sought to be refunded. When applied to tax payers filing income tax returns on a quarterly basis, the date of payment mentioned in Section 292 (now Section 230) must be deemed to be qualified by Sections 68 and 69 of the present Tax Code which respectively provide:

Sec. 68 Declaration of Quarterly Income Tax. — Every corporation shall file in duplicate a quarterly summary declaration of its gross income and deductions on a cumulative basis for the preceding quarter or quarters upon which the income tax, as provided in Title II of this Code shall be levied, collected and paid. The Tax so computed shall be decreased by the amount of tax previously paid or assessed during the preceding quarters and shall be paid not later than sixty (60) days from the close of each of the first three (3) quarters of the taxable year.Sec. 69. Final Adjustment Return. — Every corporation liable to tax under Section 24 shall file a final adjustment return covering the total net income for the preceding calendar or fiscal year. If the sum of the quarterly tax payments made during the said taxable year is not equal to the total tax due on the entire taxable net income of that year the corporation shall either:(a) Pay the excess still due; or(b) Be refunded the excess amount paid, as the case may be.In case the corporation is entitled to a refund of the excess estimated quarterly income taxes paid, the refundable amount shown on its final adjustment return may be credited against the estimated quarterly income tax liabilities for the taxable quarters of the succeeding taxable year.

It may be observed that although quarterly taxes due are required to be paid within sixty days from the close of each quarter, the fact that the amount shall be deducted from the tax due for the succeeding quarter shows that until a final adjustment return shall have been filed, the taxes paid in the preceding quarters are merely partial taxes due from a corporation. Neither amount can serve as the final figure to quantity what is due the government nor what should be refunded to the corporation.This interpretation may be gleaned from the last paragraph of Section 69 of the Tax Code which provides that the refundable amount, in case a refund is due a corporation, is that amount which is shown on its final adjustment return and not on its quarterly returns.Therefore, when private respondent paid P3,246,141.00 on May 30, 1983, it would not have been able to ascertain on that date, that the said amount was refundable. The same applies with cogency to the payment of P396,874.00 on August 29, 1983.Clearly, the prescriptive period of two years should commence to run only from the time that the refund is ascertained, which can only be determined after a final adjustment return is accomplished. In the present case, this date is April 16, 1984, and two years from this date would be April 16, 1986. The record shows that the claim for refund was filed on December 10, 1985 and the petition for review was brought before the CTA on January 2, 1986. Both dates are within

22

Page 23: Remedies Under the NIRC

the two-year reglementary period. Private respondent being a corporation, Section 292 (now Section 230) cannot serve as the sole basis for determining the two-year prescriptive period for refunds. As we have earlier said in the TMX Sales case, Sections 68, 69, and 70 on Quarterly Corporate Income Tax Payment and Section 321 should be considered in conjunction with it.Moreover, even if the two-year period had already lapsed, the same is not jurisdictional  4 and may be suspended for reasons of equity and other special circumstances. 5

Petitioner also raises the issue of whether or not private respondent has satisfactorily shown by competent evidence that it is entitled to the amount sought to be refunded. This being a question of fact, this Court is bound by the findings of the Court of Tax Appeals which has clearly established the propriety of private respondent's claim for refund for excess 1983 quarterly income tax payments. On the other hand, petitioner CIR has failed to present any documentary or testimonial evidence in support of his case. Instead, he opted to postpone the hearings several times and later chose to submit the case for decision on the basis of the records and pleadings of instant case.To repeat, we find that private respondent has presented sufficient evidence in support of its claim for refund, whereas petitioner has failed to controvert the same adequately.WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DISMISSED and the decision of the Court of Appeals is hereby AFFIRMED in toto. No costs.SO ORDERED.

-------------

Gibbs v. Collector of Internal Revenue

Facts:Finley J. Gibbs and Diane P. Gibbs, c/o Francisco Collantes were assessed of deficiency Income Tax Assessment Notice. Allison J. Gibbs signing as attorney-in-fact, acknowledged for the Gibbs who were then living in Atherton, California receipt of the deficient income tax assessment; formally protested the same in writing, paid the assessment and likewise formally demanded in writing its refund. Of course, the petitioners maintain that Allison J. Gibbs, at least until September 30, 1957, acted merely as agent or attorney-in-fact of the petitioners and never as their legal counsel. In support of this, it is argued that prior to October 26, 1956, Allison J. Gibbs had explicitly qualified his signature to all his correspondences regarding the disputed assessment as "attorney-in-fact." Furthermore, it is urged that as might be seen on the face of the assessment notice itself, the real legal counsel of the petitioners in the matter of the said assessment was Atty. Francisco Collantes.HELD:That Allison J. Gibbs was not merely the agent of the petitioners in the matter under litigation, contrary to all that is alleged above, is demonstrated, however, by the following circumstances obtaining in this case:

1. Allison J. Gibbs acknowledged for the petitioners receipt of the deficiency income tax assessment, formally protested the same in writing, paid the assessment and likewise formally demanded in writing its refund.

2. As far back as 1952, Allison J. Gibbs' Law office had been representing the petitioners as the latter's counsel.

3. Atty. Francisco Collantes, to whom the assessment notice was admittedly addressed, at the time of the said assessment, was a staff lawyer in the firm of Gibbs and Chuidian, of which Allison J. Gibbs was a principal partner.

We find all the above as ample evidence of the lawyer-client-relationship of the petitioners herein and Allison J, Gibbs. Besides, it should be recalled that among the charges which Allison J. Gibbs claimed he would collect if his demand for refund for the petitioners were not effected by the respondent Commissioner was "attorney's fees of twenty five percent (25%) of the amount involved." (Letter of October 3, 1956.) How, then, may this statement be reconciled with the present denial that Allison was indeed the petitioners' counsel when he wrote the said letter of October 3, 1956?There can be no question, therefore, that the receipt of the October 26, 1956 letter-decision of the respondent Commissioner by Allison J. Gibbs was receipt of the same by the petitioners, the former being then the latter's legal counsel. In the premises, the respondent court cannot be considered to have erred,

therefore, in computing the 30-day prescriptive period in question from the date the said letter was received by Allison J. Gibbs.----------------------------CIR v. Splash Corporation

------------------------ATLAS CONSOLIDATED MINING DEVT CORP vs. CIRGR Nos. 141104 & 148763, June 8, 2007

"The taxpayer must justify his claim for tax exemption or refund by the clearest grant of organic or statute law and should not be permitted to stand on vague implications."

"Export processing zones (EPZA) are effectively considered as foreign territory for tax purposes."

FACTS:  Petitioner corporation, a VAT-registered taxpayer engaged in mining, production, and sale of various mineral products, filed claims with the BIR for refund/credit of input VAT on its purchases of capital goods and on its zero-rated sales in the taxable quarters of the years 1990 and 1992. BIR did not immediately act on the matter prompting the petitioner to file a petition for review before the CTA. The latter denied the claims on the grounds that for zero-rating to apply, 70% of the company's sales must consists of exports, that the same were not filed within the 2-year prescriptive period (the claim for 1992 quarterly returns were judicially filed only on April 20, 1994), and that petitioner failed to submit substantial evidence to support its claim for refund/credit.    The petitioner, on the other hand, contends that CTA failed to consider the following: sales to PASAR and PHILPOS within the EPZA as zero-rated export sales; the 2-year prescriptive period should be counted from the date of filing of the last adjustment return which was April 15, 1993, and not on every end of the applicable quarters; and that the certification of the independent CPA attesting to the correctness of the contents of the summary of suppliers’ invoices or receipts examined, evaluated and audited by said CPA should substantiate its claims. 

ISSUE: Did the petitioner corporation sufficiently establish the factual bases for its applications for refund/credit of input VAT?

HELD:  No. Although the Court agreed with the petitioner corporation that the two-year prescriptive period for the filing of claims for refund/credit of input VAT must be counted from the date of filing of the quarterly VAT return, and that sales to PASAR and PHILPOS inside the EPZA are taxed as exports because these export processing zones are to be managed as a separate customs territory from the rest of the Philippines, and thus, for tax purposes, are effectively considered as foreign territory, it still denies the claims of petitioner corporation for refund of its input VAT on its purchases of capital goods and effectively zero-rated sales during the period claimed for not being established and substantiated by appropriate and sufficient evidence.     Tax refunds are in the nature of tax exemptions.  It is regarded as in derogation of the sovereign authority, and should be construed in strictissimi juris against the person or entity claiming the exemption.  The taxpayer who claims for exemption must justify his claim by the clearest grant of organic or statute law and should not be permitted to stand on vague implications.------------------------

CIR vs. MIRANT PAGBILAO CORPORATION (FORMERLY SOUTHERN ENERGY QUEZON, INC.)

VELASCO JR., J.:

MPC, formerly Southern Energy Quezon, Inc., and also formerly known as Hopewell (Phil.) Corporation, is a domestic firm engaged in the generation of power which it sells to the National Power Corporation (NPC).

23

Page 24: Remedies Under the NIRC

From 1993 to 1996, MPC secured the services of Mitsubishi Corporation (Mitsubishi) of Japan. for the construction of the electrical and mechanical equipment portion of its Pagbilao, Quezon.

In its revised charter, as found in RA No. 6395, it is exempt from all taxes. The following ensued after the sale of the power generation service to NPC, viz:

December 1, 1997:With the above-mentioned exemption, it filed with the RDO No. 60 in Lucena City an application for Effective Zero Rating covering the construction and operation of its Pagbilao power state under a Build, Operate, and Transfer scheme. This application, it based with Section 108(B)(3) of the Tax Code - Zero-rated for VAT purposes.

January 28, 1998:Since, no response has been received from the BIR district office (RDO), it refiled the same application before the BIR.

May 13, 1999:CIR issued VAT Ruling No. 052-99, stating that "the supply of electricity by Hopewell Phil. to the NPC, shall be subject to the zero percent (0%) VAT, pursuant to Section 108 (B) (3) of the NIRC of 1997."

April 14, 1998MPC paid Mitsubishi the VAT component for the progress billings from April 1993-September 1996, supported by OR No. 0189 covering P135,993,570.00. Mitsubishi had advanced the VAT component as this serves as its output VAT which is essential for the determination of its VAT payment.

August 25, 1998 While awaiting approval of its application, it file its quarterly VAT return, 2nd quarter of 1998, reflecting total Input VAT of P148,003,047.62 (inclusive of the P135,993,570.00 VAT component of the progress billings)

December 20, 1999 MPC filed a claim for refund of the unutilized Input VAT of P148,003,047.62 No action from the CIR as of yet…

It filed a petition for review before the CTA and contends that with the inaction of the CIR, its claim for refund forestall the running of the two-year prescriptive period under Section 229 of the NIRC. CIR asserted that the MPC's claim for refund cannot be granted because MPC's sale of electricity to NPC is not zero-rated for its failure to secure an approved application for zero-rating. CTA granted MPC's claim for input VAT refund or credit, but only P 10,766,939.48 and ordered the CIR to refund or issued Tax Credit Certificate to MPC. Before the CA, modified CTAs decision by ordering the CIR to make refund or issue a tax credit certificate in favor of MPC of its unutilized input VAT payments directly attributable to its effectively zero-rated sales, 2nd quarter 1998 of P146,760,509.48.

ISSUES: MPCs entitlement to zero-rating for VAT purposed for its sales and services to tax-exempt

NPC Refund or Tax Credit for its unutilized input VAT, 2nd quarter of 1998

HELD: Petition is Partly granted, ordering the CIR for the issuance of the tax credit certificate to MPC representing its unutilized input VAT payments directly attributable to its effectively zero-rated sales, 2nd quarter of P10,766,939.48 but denying the tax refund or credit to the extent of P135,993,570 (P146,760,509.48 - P10,766,939.48) representing its input VAT payments for service purchases from Mitsubishi Corporation of Japan for the construction of a portion of its Pagbilao, Quezon power station on the ground that it has prescribed.

On claim for refund:The claim for tax refund may be based on a statute granting tax exemption, which is to be construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer, meaning that the claim cannot be made to rest on vague inference.

Where the rule of strict interpretation against the taxpayer is applicable as the claim for refund partakes of the nature of an exemption, the claimant must show that he clearly falls under the exempting statute.

On Prescription:The claim for tax refund/ credit of input tax covered by OR No. 0189, re: purchases by MPC from Mitsubishi from 1993 to 1996 was filed on December 20, 1999,clearly way beyond the two-year prescriptive period set in Sec. 112 of the NIRC, which provides:

(A) Zero-rated or Effectively Zero-rated Sales. - Any VAT-registered person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may, within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made, apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales, except transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against output tax: x x x

The above proviso clearly provides that unutilized input VAT payments not otherwise used for any internal revenue tax due the taxpayer must be claimed within two years reckoned from the close of the taxable quarter when the relevant sales were made pertaining to the input VAT regardless of whether said tax was paid or not.

Thus, when a zero-rated VAT taxpayer pays its input VAT a year after the pertinent transaction, said taxpayer only has a year to file a claim for refund or tax credit of the unutilized creditable input VAT. The reckoning frame would always be the end of the quarter when the pertinent sales or transaction was made, regardless when the input VAT was paid.

The creditable input VAT due for the period covering the progress billing of September 6, 1996 is the third quarter of 1996 ending on September 30, 1996, any claim for unutilized creditable input VAT refund or tax credit for said quarter prescribed two years after September 30, 1996 or on September 30, 1998. Consequently, MPC's claim for refund or tax credit filed on December 10, 1999 had already prescribed.

MPC cannot avail itself of the provisions of Section 204(C) or 229 of the NIRC which, for the purpose of refund, prescribes a different starting point for the two-year prescriptive limit for the filing of a claim therefore and in both instances apply only to erroneous payment or illegal collection of internal revenue taxes.

Sec. 204. Authority of the Commissioner to Compromise, Abate and Refund or Credit Taxes.-- The Commissioner may –x x x x

(c) Credit or refund taxes erroneously or illegally received or penalties imposed without authority, refund the value of internal revenue stamps when they are returned in good condition by the purchaser, and, in his discretion, redeem or change unused stamps that have been rendered unfit for use and refund their value upon proof of destruction. No credit or refund of taxes or penalties shall be allowed unless the taxpayer files in writing with the Commissioner a claim for credit or refund within two (2) years after the payment of the tax or penalty: Provided, however, That a return filed showing an overpayment shall be considered as a written claim for credit or refund.x x x x

Sec. 229. Recovery of Tax Erroneously or Illegally Collected.-- No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any national internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or of any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority, of any sum alleged to have been excessively or in any manner wrongfully collected without authority, or of any sum alleged to have been excessively or in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Commissioner; but such suit or proceeding may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum has been paid under protest or duress.

24

Page 25: Remedies Under the NIRC

In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be filed after the expiration of two (2) years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment: Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously paid. (Emphasis ours.)

On entitlement to creditable input VAT:Section 105 of the NIRC provides that a creditable input VAT is an indirect tax which can be shifted or passed on to the buyer, transferee, or lessee of the goods, properties, or services of the taxpayer. The fact that the subsequent sale or transaction involves a wholly-tax exempt client, resulting in a zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transaction, does not, standing alone, deprive the taxpayer of its right to a refund for any unutilized creditable input VAT, albeit the erroneous, illegal, or wrongful payment angle does not enter the equation.

Its application has been drawn from the Tax Credit Method, of which an entity can credit against or subtract from the VAT charged on its sales or outputs the VAT paid on its purchases, inputs and imports. If at the end of a taxable quarter the output taxes charged by a seller are equal to the input taxes passed on by the suppliers, no payment is required. It is when the output taxes exceed the input taxes that the excess has to be paid. If, however, the input taxes exceed the output taxes, the excess shall be carried over to the succeeding quarter or quarters.

Should the input taxes result from zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transactions or from the acquisition of capital goods, any excess over the output taxes shall instead be refunded to the taxpayer or credited against other internal revenue taxes.

On Zero-rated transactions:It refers to the export sale of goods and supply of services. The tax rate is set at zero. When applied to the tax base, such rate obviously results in no tax chargeable against the purchaser. The seller of such transactions charges no output tax, but can claim a refund of or a tax credit certificate for the VAT previously charged by suppliers.----------

CIR v. Aichi Forging Company of Asia

FACTS:On September 30, 2004, Aichi Forging filed a claim for refund/credit of input VAT attributable to its zero-rated sales for the period July 1, 2002 to September 30, 2002 with the CIR through the DOF One-Stop Shop. On the same day, Aichi Forging filed a Petition for Review with the CTA for the same action. The BIR disputed the claim and alleged that the same was filed beyond the two-year period given that 2004 was a leap year and thus the claim should have been filed on September 29, 2004. The CIR also raised issues related to the reckoning of the 2-year period and the simultaneous filing of the administrative and judicial claims. 

ISSUES:(1) Was the Petitioner’s administrative claim filed out of time? (2) Was the filing of the judicial claim premature?

HELD:(1) NO. The right to claim the refund must be reckoned from the “close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made” – in this case September 30, 2004. The Court added that the rules under Sections 204 (C) and 229 as cross-referred to Section 114 do not apply as they only cover erroneous payments or illegal collections of taxes which is not the case for refund of unutilized input VAT.  Thus, the claim was filed on time even if 2004 was a leap year since the sanctioned method of counting is the number of months. 

(2) YES. Section 112 mandates that the taxpayer filing the refund must either wait for the decision of the CIR or the lapse of the 120-day period provided therein before filing its judicial claim. Failure to observe this rule is fatal to a claim. Thus, Section 112 (A) was interpreted to refer only to claims filed with the CIR

and not appeals to the CTA given that the word used is “application”. Finally, the Court said that applying the 2-year period even to judicial claims would render nugatory Section 112 (D) which already provides for a specific period to appeal to the CTA --- i.e., (a) within 30 days after a decision within the 120-day period and (b) upon expiry of the 120-day without a decision.---------------------------------

Philam Asset vs CTA

Facts:

Petitioner acts as invesment manager of PFI &PBFI. It provides management &technical services and thus respectively paid for it’s services. PFI & PBFI withhold the amount of equivalent to 5% creditable tax regulation. On April 3, 1998, filed itrwith a net loss thus incurred with holding tax. Petitioner filed for refund from BIR but was unanswered . CTA denied the petition for review. CA held that to request for either a refund or credit of income taxpaid, a corporation must signify it’s intention by marking the corresponding box on it’s annual corporate adjustment return.

Issue:Whether or not petitioner is entitled to a refund of it’s creditible taxes.

Ruling:Any tax income that is paid in excess of it’s amount due to the government may be refunded, provided that a taxpayer properly applies for the refund. One can not get a tax refund and a tax credit at the same time for the same excess to income taxes paid. Failure to signify one’s intention in Final Assessment Return (FAR) does not mean outright barring of a valid request for a refund 

Requiring that the ITR on the FAR of the succeeding year be presented to the BIR in requesting a tax refund has no basis in law and jurisprudence. The Tax Code likewise allows the refund of taxes to taxpayer that claims it in writing within 2 years after payment of the taxes. Technicalities and legalism should not be misused by the government to keep money not belonging to it, and thereby enriched itself at the expense of it’s law-abiding citizens.---------------Calamba Steel Center Inc. v CIRGR 151857, April 28, 2005

Facts:Petitioner is a domestic corporation engaged in the manufacture of steel blanks for use by manufacturers of automotive, electrical, electronics in industrial and household appliances.In it's amended Corporate Annual Income Tax Return on June 4, 1996 it declared a net taxable income of P9,461,597.00, tax credits of P6,471,246.00 and tax due in the amount of P3,311,559.00.  It also reported uarterly payments for the second and third quarters of 1995 in the amounts of P2,328,747.26 and P1,082,108.00, respectively.  It is the contention of the petitioner in this case filed in 1997, that it is entitled to a refund.  The refund was purportedly due to income taxes witheld from it, and remitted in its behalf, by the witholding agents. Such witheld tax, as per petitioners 1997 return, were not utilised in 1996 since due to it's  income/loss positions for the three quarters of 1996.  

ISSUE:  Whether or not a tax refund may be claimed even beyong the taxable year following that in which the tax credit arises.

Held: Yes, however; it is still incumbent upon the claimant to prove that it is entitled to such refund.  Tax refunds being in the nature of tax exemptions such must be construed strictissimi juris against the taypayer-claimant. Under the NIRC, the only limitation as regards the claiming of tax refunds is that such must be made within two years.  The claim for refund made by Calamba steel was well within the 2 year period.As regards the procedure taken by counsel of Calamba Steel in submitting the final adjustment returns (1996) after trial has been conducted, the Court said that although the ordinary rules of procedure from

25

Page 26: Remedies Under the NIRC

upon this jurisprudence mandates that the proceedings before the tax court's shall not be governed by strictly  technical rules of evidence.  Moreoover, as regards evidence, the court further said that Judicial notice could have been taken by the cA and the CTA of the 1996 final adjustment return made by petitioner in another case then pending with the CTA.------------------Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. V. CIRPetitioner Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. is a foreign corporation duly licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to do business in the Philippines as an on-line international carrier operating the Cebu-Singapore-Cebu and Davao-Singapore-Davao routes. In the course of its international flight operations, petitioner purchased aviation fuel from Petron Corporation (Petron) from July 1, 1998 to December 31, 1998, paying the excise taxes thereon in the sum of P5,007,043.39. The payment was advanced by Singapore Airlines, Ltd. on behalf of petitioner.On October 20, 1999, petitioner filed an administrative claim for refund in the amount of  P5,007,043.39 representing excise taxes on the purchase of jet fuel from Petron, which it alleged to have been erroneously paid. The claim is based on Section 135 (a) and (b) of the 1997 Tax Code, which provides:SEC. 135. Petroleum Products Sold to International Carriers and Exempt Entities or Agencies. – Petroleum products sold to the following are exempt from excise tax:

(a) International carriers of Philippine or foreign registry on their use or consumption outside the Philippines: Provided, That the petroleum products sold to these international carriers shall be stored in abonded storage tank and may be disposed of only in accordance with the rules and regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of Finance, upon recommendation of the Commissioner;(b) Exempt entities or agencies covered by tax treaties, conventions and other international agreements for their use or consumption: Provided, however, That the country of said foreign international carrier or exempt entities or agencies exempts from similar taxes petroleum products sold to Philippine carriers, entities or agencies; and

x x x x (Emphasis supplied.)Petitioner also invoked Article 4(2) of the Air Transport Agreement between the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the Government of the Republic of Singapore3 (Air Transport Agreement between RP and Singapore) which reads:ART. 4x x x x2. Fuel, lubricants, spare parts, regular equipment and aircraft stores introduced into, or taken on board aircraft in the territory of one Contracting Party by, or on behalf of, a designated airline of the other Contracting Party and intended solely for use in the operation of the agreed services shall, with the exception of charges corresponding to the service performed, be exempt from the same customs duties, inspection fees and other duties or taxes imposed in the territory of the first Contracting Party, even when these supplies are to be used on the parts of the journey performed over the territory of the Contracting Party in which they are introduced into or taken on board. The materials referred to above may be required to be kept under customs supervision and control.4

Due to the inaction by respondent CIR , petitioner filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) on June 30, 2000.On July 28, 2003, the CTA rendered its decision5 denying petitioner’s claim for refund. Said court ruled that while petitioner’s country indeed exempts from similar taxes petroleum products sold to Philippine carriers, petitioner nevertheless failed to comply with the second requirement under Section 135 (a) of the 1997 Tax Code as it failed to prove that the jet fuel delivered by Petron came from the latter’s bonded storage tank. Presiding Justice Ernesto D. Acosta dissented from the majority view that petitioner’s claim should be denied, stating that even if the bonded storage tank is required under Section 135 (a), the claim can still be justified under Section 135 (b) in view of our country’s existing Air Transport Agreement with the Republic of Singapore which shows the reciprocal enjoyment of the privilege of the designated airline of the contracting parties.Its motion for reconsideration having been denied by the CTA, petitioner elevated the case to the CA. Petitioner assailed the CTA in not holding that there are distinct and separate instances of exemptions provided in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of Section 135, and therefore the proviso found in paragraph (a) should not have been applied to the exemption granted under paragraph (b).The CA affirmed the denial of the claim for tax refund and dismissed the petition. It ruled that while petitioner is exempt from paying excise taxes on petroleum products purchased in the Philippines by

virtue of Section 135 (b), petitioner is not the proper party to seek for the refund of the excise taxes paid. Petitioner’s motion for reconsideration was likewise denied by the appellate court.In this appeal, petitioner argues that it is the proper party to file the claim for refund, being the entity granted the tax exemption under the Air Transport Agreement between RP and Singapore. It disagrees with respondent’s reasoning that since excise tax is an indirect tax it is the direct liability of the manufacturer, Petron, and not the petitioner, because this puts to naught whatever exemption was granted to petitioner by Article 4 of the Air Transport Agreement.Petitioner further contends that respondent is estopped from questioning the right of petitioner to claim a refund of the excise taxes paid after issuing BIR Ruling No. 339-92 which already settled the matter. It further points out that the CTA has consistently ruled in a number of decisions involving the same parties that petitioner is the proper party to seek the refund of excise taxes paid on its purchases of petroleum products. Finally, it emphasizes that respondent never raised in issue petitioner’s legal personality to seek a tax refund in the administrative level. Citing this Court’s ruling in the case of  CIR v. Court of Tax Appeals, et al.6 petitioner asserts that respondent is in estoppel to question petitioner’s standing to file the claim for refund for its failure to timely raise the issue in the administrative level, as well as before the CTA.On the other hand, the Solicitor General on behalf of respondent, maintains that the excise tax passed on to the petitioner by Petron being in the nature of an indirect tax, it cannot be the subject matter of an administrative claim for refund/tax credit, following the ruling in Contex Corporation v. CIR .7 Moreover, assuming arguendo that petitioner falls under any of the enumerated transactions/persons entitled to tax exemption under Section 135 of the 1997 Tax Code, what the law merely contemplates is exemption from the payment of excise tax to the seller/manufacturer, in this case Petron, but not an exemption from payment of excise tax to the BIR, much more an entitlement to a refund from the BIR. Being the buyer, petitioner is not the person required by law nor the person statutorily liable to pay the excise tax but the seller, following the provision of Section 130 (A) (1) (2).The Solicitor General also asserts that contrary to petitioner’s argument that respondent never raised in the administrative level the issue of whether petitioner is the proper party to file the claim for refund, records would show that respondent actually raised the matter of whether petitioner is entitled to the tax refund being claimed in his Answer dated August 8, 2000, in the Joint Stipulation of Facts, and in his Memorandum submitted before the CTA where respondent categorically averred that "petitioner x x x is not the entity directly liable for the payment of the tax, hence, not the proper party who should claim the refund of the excise taxes paid."8

We rule for the respondent.The core issue presented is the legal personality of petitioner to file an administrative claim for refund of excise taxes alleged to have been erroneously paid to its supplier of aviation fuel here in the Philippines.In three previous cases involving the same parties, this Court has already settled the issue of whether petitioner is the proper party to seek the refund of excise taxes paid on its purchase of aviation fuel from a local manufacturer/seller. Following the principle of stare decisis, the present petition must therefore be denied.Excise taxes, which apply to articles manufactured or produced in the Philippines for domestic sale or consumption or for any other disposition and to things imported into the Philippines,9 is basically an indirect tax. While the tax is directly levied upon the manufacturer/importer upon removal of the taxable goods from its place of production or from the customs custody, the tax, in reality, is actually passed on to the end consumer as part of the transfer value or selling price of the goods, sold, bartered or exchanged.10 In early cases, we have ruled that for indirect taxes (such as valued-added tax or VAT), the proper party to question or seek a refund of the tax is the statutory taxpayer, the person on whom the tax is imposed by law and who paid the same even when he shifts the burden thereof to another. 11 Thus, in Contex Corporation v. CIR ,12 we held that while it is true that petitioner corporation should not have been liable for the VAT inadvertently passed on to it by its supplier since their transaction is a zero-rated sale on the part of the supplier, the petitioner is not the proper party to claim such VAT refund. Rather, it is the petitioner’s suppliers who are the proper parties to claim the tax credit and accordingly refund the petitioner of the VAT erroneously passed on to the latter.13

In the first Silkair case14 decided on February 6, 2008, this Court categorically declared:The proper party to question, or seek a refund of, an indirect tax is the statutory taxpayer, the person on whom the tax is imposed by law and who paid the same even if he shifts the burden thereof to another. Section 130 (A) (2) of the NIRC provides that "[u]nless otherwise specifically allowed, the return shall be filed and the excise tax paid by the manufacturer or producer before removal of domestic products from place of production." Thus, Petron Corporation, not Silkair, is the statutory taxpayer which is

26

Page 27: Remedies Under the NIRC

entitled to claim a refund based on Section 135 of the NIRC of 1997 and Article 4(2) of the Air Transport Agreement between RP and Singapore.Even if Petron Corporation passed on to Silkair the burden of the tax, the additional amount billed to Silkair for jet fuel is not a tax but part of the price which Silkair had to pay as a purchaser. 15 (Emphasis supplied.)Just a few months later, the decision in the second Silkair case16 was promulgated, reiterating the rule that in the refund of indirect taxes such as excise taxes, the statutory taxpayer is the proper party who can claim the refund. We also clarified that petitioner Silkair, as the purchaser and end-consumer, ultimately bears the tax burden, but this does not transform its status into a statutory taxpayer.The person entitled to claim a tax refund is the statutory taxpayer. Section 22(N) of the NIRC defines a taxpayer as "any person subject to tax." In CIR v. Procter and Gamble Phil. Mfg. Corp., the Court ruled that:‘A "person liable for tax" has been held to be a "person subject to tax" and properly considered a "taxpayer." The terms "liable for tax" and "subject to tax" both connote a legal obligation or duty to pay a tax.’The excise tax is due from the manufacturers of the petroleum products and is paid upon removal of the products from their refineries. Even before the aviation jet fuel is purchased from Petron, the excise tax is already paid by Petron. Petron, being the manufacturer, is the "person subject to tax." In this case, Petron, which paid the excise tax upon removal of the products from its Bataan refinery, is the "person liable for tax." Petitioner is neither a "person liable for tax" nor "a person subject to tax." There is also no legal duty on the part of petitioner to pay the excise tax; hence, petitioner cannot be considered the taxpayer.Even if the tax is shifted by Petron to its customers and even if the tax is billed as a separate item in the aviation delivery receipts and invoices issued to its customers, Petron remains the taxpayer because the excise tax is imposed directly on Petron as the manufacturer. Hence, Petron, as the statutory taxpayer, is the proper party that can claim the refund of the excise taxes paid to the BIR.17 (Emphasis supplied.)1avvphi1Petitioner’s contention that the CTA and CA rulings would put to naught the exemption granted under Section 135 (b) of the 1997 Tax Code and Article 4 of the Air Transport Agreement is not well-taken. Since the supplier herein involved is also Petron, our pronouncement in the second Silkair case, relative to the contractual undertaking of petitioner to submit a valid exemption certificate for the purpose, is relevant. We thus noted:The General Terms & Conditions for Aviation Fuel Supply (Supply Contract) signed between petitioner (buyer) and Petron (seller) provide:"11.3 If Buyer is entitled to purchase any Fuel sold pursuant to the Agreement free of any taxes, duties or charges, Buyer shall timely deliver to Seller a valid exemption certificate for such purchase." (Emphasis supplied)This provision instructs petitioner to timely submit a valid exemption certificate to Petron in order that Petron will not pass on the excise tax to petitioner. As correctly suggested by the CTA, petitioner should invoke its tax exemption to Petron before buying the aviation jet fuel. Petron, however, remains the statutory taxpayer on those excise taxes.Revenue Regulations No. 3-2008 (RR 3-2008) provides that "subject to the subsequent filing of a claim for excise tax credit/refund or product replenishment, all manufacturers of articles subject to excise tax under Title VI of the NIRC of 1997, as amended, shall pay the excise tax that is otherwise due on every removal thereof from the place of production that is intended for exportation or sale/delivery to international carriers or to tax-exempt entities/agencies." The Department of Finance and the BIR recognize the tax exemption granted to international carriers but they consistently adhere to the view that manufacturers of articles subject to excise tax are the statutory taxpayers that are liable to pay the tax, thus, the proper party to claim any tax refunds.18

The above observation remains pertinent to this case because the very same provision in the General Terms and Conditions for Aviation Fuel Supply Contract also appears in the documentary evidence submitted by petitioner before the CTA.19 Except for its bare allegation of being "placed in a very complicated situation" because Petron, "for fear of being assessed by Respondent, will not allow the withdrawal and delivery of the petroleum products without Petitioner’s pre-payment of the excise taxes," petitioner has not demonstrated that it dutifully complied with its contractual undertaking to timely submit to Petron a valid certificate of exemption so that Petron may subsequently file a claim for excise tax credit/refund pursuant to Revenue Regulations No. 3-2008 (RR 3-2008). It was indeed premature for

petitioner to assert that the denial of its claim for tax refund nullifies the tax exemption granted to it under Section 135 (b) of the 1997 Tax Code and Article 4 of the Air Transport Agreement.In the third Silkair case20 decided last year, the Court called the attention to the consistent rulings in the previous two Silkair cases that petitioner as the purchaser and end-consumer of the aviation fuel is not the proper party to claim for refund of excise taxes paid thereon. The situation clearly called for the application of the doctrine, stare decisis et non quieta movere. Follow past precedents and do not disturb what has been settled. Once a case has been decided one way, any other case involving exactly the same point at issue, as in the case at bar, should be decided in the same manner. 21 The Court thus finds no cogent reason to deviate from those previous rulings on the same issues herein raised.WHEREFORE, the petition for review on certiorari is DENIED. The Decision dated September 13, 2004 and Resolution dated December 21, 2004 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 82902 are AFFIRMED.With costs against the petitioner.SO ORDERED.----------------

CIR v. Mirant (Philippines) Operations Group15 June 2011

FACTS:

Mirant entered into Operating and Management Agreements with Mirant Pagbilao Corporation (formerly Southern Energy Quezon, Inc.) and Mirant Sual Corporation (formerly Southern Energy Pangasinan, Inc.) to provide these companies with maintenance and management services in connection with the operation, construction and commissioning of coal-fired power stations situated in Pagbilao, Quezon, and Sual, Pangasinan respectively.

On September 20, 2001, Mirant wrote the BIR a letter claiming a refund of ₱87,345,116.00 representing overpaid income tax.

CTA 1st Division: Partially granted Mirant’s claim for refund but the amount was reduced to P38 million which constitutes the duly substantiated unutilized creditable withholding taxes.

ISSUE: WON Mirant is entitled to a tax refund or to the issuance of a tax credit certificate and, if it is, then what is the amount to which it is entitled.

HELD: YES but it is limited to the substantiated claim.

Ratio:

1. Once a corporation exercises the option to carry-over and apply the excess quarterly income tax against the tax due for the taxable quarters of the succeeding taxable years, such option is irrevocable for that taxable period. Having chosen to carry-over the excess quarterly income tax, the corporation cannot thereafter choose to apply for a cash refund or for the issuance of a tax credit certificate for the amount representing such overpayment.

2. Mirant complied with all the requirements for the refund of its unutilized creditable withholding taxes for taxable year 2000.

The requisites for claiming a tax credit or a refund of creditable withholding tax:1) The claim must be filed with the CIR within the two-year period from the date of payment of the tax;2) It must be shown on the return that the income received was declared as part of the gross income; and3) The fact of withholding must be established by a copy of a statement duly issued by the payor to the payee showing the amount paid and the amount of the tax withheld.

Mirant complied with all the legal requirements and it is entitled, as it opted, to a refund of its excess creditable withholding tax for the taxable year 2000 in the amount of ₱38,620,427.00.

27

Page 28: Remedies Under the NIRC

28