TAX Digests
TAX Digests
TAX Digests
Menguito
Taxation Pre-Assessment Notice Estoppel Piercing the Veil of
Corporate Fiction
DominadorMenguito and his wife are the owners of Copper Kettle Catering
Services, Inc. (CKCSI). They also operate several restaurant branches in
the Philippines. One such branch was the Copper Kettle Cafeteria
Specialist (CKCS) in Club John Hay, Baguio City. The branch was
registered as a sole proprietorship. In September 1997, a formal
assessment notice (FAN) was issued against the spouses and they were
adjudged to pay P34 million in deficiency taxes for the years 1991 to 1993.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue found that in order for CKCS to operate in
Club John Hay, a contract was entered into by CKCSI and Club John Hay;
hence, CKCS and CKCSI are one and the same.
Mrs.Menguito then sent a letter to the BIR acknowledging receipt of the
assessment notice. She asked for more time to sort the issue. Later, when
Menguito eventually filed a protest, he denied, through his witness (Ma.
Therese Nalda, CKCS employee), receiving the FAN; that the FAN was
addressed to the wrong person because it was addressed to CKCSI not
CKCS. He presented as evidence a photocopy of the articles of
incorporation (AOI) of CKCSI.
On the other hand, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) presented
proof of the due mailing of the FAN. It however was not able to prove that it
issued a pre-assessment notice (PAN) or a post-assessment notice.
ISSUE: Whether or not due process was observed by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue.
HELD: Yes. The veil of corporate fiction is pierced because it was proven
that CKCSI is actively managing CKCS. Further, CKCS is more known as
CKCSI. Also, the photocopy of the AOI presented by Menguito is not a
conclusive proof of the separate personality of CKCSI and CKCS.
More importantly, Menguito and his wife are in estoppel because they
already acknowledged the receipt of the FAN through the letter sent by
Mrs.Menguito to the BIR. They cannot later on deny the receipt of the FAN.
Worse, it should be Menguito who should be directly denying the receipt
and not through an employee (Nalda) who was not even an employee of
the spouses when the FAN was issued and received in 1997. It was only in
1998 that Nalda was employed by CKCS. Since Menguito did not legally
deny the receipt of the FAN, the presumption that he actually received it still
subsists. Further, based on the records, Menguito, in the stipulation of
facts, acknowledged the receipt of the FAN.
Anent the issue of the non-issuance of the PAN, the same is not vital to due
process. The Supreme Court ruled that the strict requirement of proving
Petition lacks merit. Under Section 203 of the NIRC, internal revenue taxes
must be assessed within three years counted from the period fixed by law
for the filing of the tax return or the actual date of filing, whichever is later.
This mandate governs the question of prescription of the governments
right to assess internal revenue taxes primarily to safeguard the interests of
taxpayers from unreasonable investigation. Accordingly, the government
must assess internal revenue taxes on time so as not to extend indefinitely
the period of assessment and deprive the taxpayer of the assurance that it
will no longer be subjected to further investigation for taxes after the
expiration of reasonable period of time.
An exception to the three-year prescriptive period on the assessment of
taxes is Section 222 (b) of the NIRC, which provides:
(b) If before the expiration of the time prescribed in Section 203 for the
assessment of the tax, both the Commissioner and the taxpayer have
agreed in writing to its assessment after such time, the tax may be
assessed within the period agreed upon. The period so agreed upon may
be extended by subsequent written agreement made before the expiration
of the period previously agreed upon.
The above provision authorizes the extension of the original three-year
period by the execution of a valid waiver. Under RMO No. 20-90, which
implements Sections 203 and 222 (b), the following procedures should be
followed:
1. The waiver must be in the form identified as Annex "A" hereof.
2. The waiver shall be signed by the taxpayer himself or his duly authorized
representative. In the case of a corporation, the waiver must be signed by
any of its responsible officials.
Soon after the waiver is signed by the taxpayer, the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue or the revenue official authorized by him, as hereinafter
provided, shall sign the waiver indicating that the Bureau has accepted and
agreed to the waiver. The date of such acceptance by the Bureau should
be indicated. Both the date of execution by the taxpayer and date of
acceptance by the Bureau should be before the expiration of the period of
prescription or before the lapse of the period agreed upon in case a
subsequent agreement is executed.
3. The following revenue officials are authorized to sign the waiver.
A. In the National Office
3. Commissioner For tax cases involving more than P1M
B. In the Regional Offices
1. The Revenue District Officer with respect to tax cases still pending
investigation and the period to assess is about to prescribe regardless of
amount.
4. The waiver must be executed in three (3) copies, the original copy to be
attached to the docket of the case, the second copy for the taxpayer and
the third copy for the Office accepting the waiver. The fact of receipt by the
taxpayer of his/her file copy shall be indicated in the original copy.
5. The foregoing procedures shall be strictly followed. Any revenue official
found not to have complied with this Order resulting in prescription of the
right to assess/collect shall be administratively dealt with.
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 BIRaccepted 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 Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 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.
The waiver of the statute of limitations under the NIRC, to a certain extent
being a derogation of the taxpayers right to security against prolonged and
unscrupulous investigations, must be carefully and strictly construed. The
waiver of the statute of limitations does not mean that the taxpayer
relinquishes the right to invoke prescription unequivocally, particularly
where the language of the document is equivocal. Notably, in this case, the
waiver became unlimited in time because it did not specify a definite date,
agreed upon between the BIR and respondent, within which the former
may assess and collect taxes. It also had no binding effect on respondent
because there was no consent by the Commissioner. On this basis, no
implied consent can be presumed, nor can it be contended that the
concurrence to such waiver is a mere formality.
Consequently, petitioner cannot rely on its invocation of the rule that the
government cannot be estopped by the mistakes of its revenue officers in
the enforcement of RMO No. 20-90 because the law on prescription should
be interpreted in a way conducive to bringing about the beneficent purpose
of affording protection to the taxpayer within the contemplation of the
Commission which recommended the approval of the law.
excuse the delayed billing, since it could have inquired into the amount of
their obligation and reasonably determine the amount.
CIR v Japan Airlines (JAL)
(Situs of Taxation)
Facts:
JAL is a foreign corporation engaged in the business of International air
carriage. Since mid-July of 1957, JAL hadmaintained an office at the
Filipinas Hotel, RoxasBoulevardManila. The said office did not sell tickets
but was merely for the promotion of the company. On July 17 1957,
JALconstituted PAL as its agent in the Philippines. PAL sold ticketsfor and
in behalf of JAL.On June 1972, JAL then received deficiency income
taxassessments notices and a demand letter from petitioner for years 1959
through 1963. JAL protested against saidassessments alleging that as a
non-resident foreigncorporation, it as taxable only on income from
Philippinessources as determined by section 37 of the Tax Code,
therebeing no income on said years, JAL is not liable for taxes.
Issue: WON proceeds from sales of JAL tickets sold in thePhilippines
are taxable as income from sources within thePhilippines.
Held: The ticket sales are taxable.
Citing the case of CIR v BOAC, the court reiterated that thesource of an
income is the property, activity or service thatproduced the income. For the
source of income to beconsidered as coming from the Philippines, it is
sufficient thatthe income is derived from activity within the Philippines.The
absence of flight operations to and from the Philippines isnot determinative
of the source of income or the situs of income taxation. The test of taxability
is the source, and thesource of the income is that activity which produced
theincome. In this case, as JAL constitutes PAL as its agent, thesales of
JAL tickets made by PAL is taxable
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE v.
MANILA MINING
CORPORATION
468 SCRA 571 (2005), THIRD DIVISION, (Carpio Morales,
For a judicial claim for refund to prosper, the party must not only prove that
it is a VAT registered entity, it must substantiate the input VAT paid by
purchase invoices or official receipts.
Respondent Manila Mining Corporation (MMC), a VAT-registered
enterprise, filed its VAT
Returns for the year of 1991 with the BIR. MMC, relying on Sec. 2 of
Executive Order (E.O.) 581 as
amended which provides that gold sold to the Central Bank is considered
an export sale which under Section 100(a)(1) of the NIRC, as amended by
dividends received from Atlantic Gulf and Pacific Co. on the condition that
Japan, its domicile state, extends in favor of Marubeni Corporation a tax
credit of not less than 20% of the dividends received. This 15% tax rate
imposed on the dividends received under Section 24(b)(1)(iii) is easily
within the maximum ceiling of 25% of the gross amount of the dividends as
decreed in Article 10(2)(b) of the Tax Treaty.
Note:
Each
tax
has
a
different
tax
basis.
Under the Philippine-Japan Tax Convention, the 25% rate fixed is the
maximum rate, as reflected in the phrase shall not exceed. This means
that any tax imposable by the contracting state concerned hould not
exceed the 25% limitation and said rate would apply only if the tax imposed
by our laws exceeds the same.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner, vs. MIRANT
PAGBILAO CORPORATION, respondent. G.R. No. 159593, October 12,
2006; Chico-Nazario, J.
The facts of this case are straight forward. Respondent is a registered VATtaxpayer with a certificate of registration issued on January 26, 1996. For
the period April 1, 1996 to December 31, 1996, respondent religiously filed
its quarterly VAT returns reflecting thereon the amount of accumulated input
taxes. These input taxes were paid to VAT suppliers of capital goods and
services for the construction and development of the power generating
plant in Pagbilao, Quezon.
A claim for refund for these input taxes was filed with the BIR. Without
waiting for its resolution in the administrative level, it filed a petition for
review with the CTA on July 10, 1998, in order to toll the running of the toeyear prescriptive period for claiming a refund under the law.
In answer to this petition, the Commissioner advanced as special and
affirmative defenses that: MPCs claim for refund is still pending
investigation and consideration before his office, accordingly, the filing of
the petition is premature; well-settled is the doctrine that provisions for
refund and credit are construed strictly against the taxpayer as they are in
the nature of tax exemption; the claimant has the burden to show that the
taxes are erroneously paid and that the claim is filed within the prescriptive
period.
The CTA ruled in favor of MPC and declared that MPC had overwhelmingly
proved, through the VAT invoices and official receipts it had presented, that
its purchases of goods and services were necessary in the construction of
power plant facilities which is used in its business of power generation and
sale.
On an appeal to the CA, the Commissioner raised new arguments which
were never raised in the CTA MPC is an electric utility subject to the
franchise tax and since it is exempt from VAT, it is not entitled to the refund.
The CA, finding no merit in the Commissioners petition, affirmed the CTA
decision.
Issue: Can the Commissioner change his theory of the case on appeal by
raising for the first time on appeal questions of both fact and law not taken
up in the tax court?
HELD: The SC ruled against the petitioner. The SC emphasized that The
settled rule is that defenses not pleaded in the answer may not be raised
for the first time on appeal. A party cannot, change fundamentally the
nature of the issue in the case. When a party deliberately adopts a certain
theory and the case is decided upon that theory in the court below, he will
not be permitted to change the same on appeal, because to permit him to
do so would be unfair to the adverse party. (Carantes v. Court of Appeals,
G.R. No. L-33360, April 25, 1977, 76 SCRA 514).
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE V.
MISTUBISHIMETAL CORPORATION (181 SCRA 214)
Facts: Atlas Consolidated Mining andDevelopment Corporation, a domestic
corporation, entered into a Loan and Sales Contract with Mitsubishi Metal
Corporation, a Japanese corporation licensed to engage in business in the
Philippines. To be able to extend the loan to Atlas, Mitsubishi entered into
another loan agreement with Export-Import Bank (Eximbank), a financing
institution owned, controlled, and financed by the Japanese government.
After making interest payments to Mitsubishi, with the corresponding 15%
tax thereon remitted to the Government of the Philippines, Altas claimed for
tax credit with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue based on Section
29(b)(7) (A) of the National Internal Revenue Code, stating that since
Eximbank, and not Mitsubishi, is where the money for the loan originated
from Eximbank, then it should be exempt from paying taxes on its loan
thereon.
Issue: WON the interest income from the loans extended to Atlas by
Mitsubishi is excludible from gross income taxation.
NO. Mitsubishi secured the loan from Eximbank in its own independent
capacity as a private entity and not as a conduit of Eximbank. Therefore,
what the subject of the 15% withholding tax is not the interest income paid
by Mitsubishi to Eximbank, but the interest income earned by Mitsubishi
from the loan to Atlas. Thus, it does not come within the ambit of Section
29(b)(7)(A), and it is not exempt from the payment of taxes.
Notes: Findings of fact of the Court of Tax Appeals are entitled to the highest
respect and can only be disturbed on appeal if they are not supported by
substantial evidence or if there is a showing of gross error or abuse on the
part of the tax court. Laws granting exemption from tax are
construed strictissimijurisagainst the taxpayer and liberally in favor of
the taxing power. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception.
August 3, 2007
FACTS:
Acosta is an employee of Intel and was assigned in a foreign country.
During that period Intel withheld the taxes due and remitted them to BIR.
Respondent claimed overpayment of taxes and filed petition for review with
CTA. CTA dismissed the petition for failure to file a written claim for refund
with the CIR a condition precedent to the filing of a petition for review with
the CTA. CA reversed the decision reasoning that Acostas filing of an
amended return indicating an overpayment was sufficient compliance with
the requirement of a written claim.
ISSUE:
Whether or not CTA has jurisdiction to take cognizance of respondents
petition for review.
RULING:
FACTS:
CREBA assails the imposition of the minimum corporate income tax (MCIT)
as being violative of the due process clause as it levies income tax even if
there is no realized gain. They also question the creditable withholding tax
(CWT) on sales of real properties classified as ordinary assets stating that
(1) they ignore the different treatment of ordinary assets and capital assets;
(2) the use of gross selling price or fair market value as basis for the CWT
and the collection of tax on a per transaction basis (and not on the net
income at the end of the year) are inconsistent with the tax on ordinary real
properties; (3) the government collects income tax even when the net
income has not yet been determined; and (4) the CWT is being levied upon
real estate enterprises but not on other enterprises, more particularly those
in the manufacturing sector.
ISSUE:
Are the impositions of the MCIT on domestic corporations and
CWT on
income from sales of real properties classified as
ordinary assets
unconstitutional?
HELD:
NO. MCIT does not tax capital but only taxes income as shown by the fact
that the MCIT is arrived at by deducting the capital spent by a corporation
in the sale of its goods, i.e., the cost of goods and other direct expenses
from gross sales. Besides, there are sufficient safeguards that exist for the
MCIT: (1) it is only imposed on the 4th year of operations; (2) the law allows
the carry forward of any excess MCIT paid over the normal income tax; and
(3) the Secretary of Finance can suspend the imposition of MCIT in
justifiable instances.
The regulations on CWT did not shift the tax base of a real estate business
income tax from net income to GSP or FMV of the property sold since the
taxes withheld are in the nature of advance tax payments and they are thus
just installments on the annual tax which may be due at the end of the
taxable year. As such the tax base for the sale of real property classified as
ordinary assets remains to be the net taxable income and the use of the
GSP or FMV is because these are the only factors reasonably known to the
buyer in connection with the performance of the duties as a withholding
agent.
Neither is there violation of equal protection even if the CWT is levied only
on the real industry as the real estate industry is, by itself, a class on its
own and can be validly treated different from other businesses.
CYANAMID PHILS. Vs. CA
In order to determine whether profits are accumulated for the reasonable
needs of the business to avoid the surtax upon the shareholders, it must be
shown that the controlling intention of the taxpayer is manifested at the time
of the accumulation, not intentions subsequently, which are mere
afterthoughts.
Facts:
Petitioner is a corporation organized under Philippine laws and is a wholly
owned subsidiary of American Cyanamid Co. based in Maine, USA. It is
engaged in the manufacture of pharmaceutical products and chemicals, a
wholesaler of imported finished goods and an imported/indentor. In 1985
the CIR assessed on petitioner a deficiency income tax of P119,817) for the
year 1981. Cyanamid protested the assessments particularly the 25%
surtax for undue accumulation of earnings. It claimed that said profits were
retained to increase petitioners working capital and it would be used for
reasonable business needs of the company. The CIR refused to allow the
cancellation of the assessments, petitioner appealed to the CTA. It claimed
that there was not legal basis for the assessment because 1) it
accumulated its earnings and profits for reasonable business requirements
to meet working capital needs and retirement of indebtedness 2) it is a
wholly owned subsidiary of American Cyanamid Company, a foreign
corporation, and its shares are listed and traded in the NY Stock Exchange.
The CTA denied the petition stating that the law permits corporations to set
aside a portion of its retained earnings for specified purposes under Sec.
43 of the Corporation Code but that petitioners purpose did not fall within
such purposes. It found that there was no need to set aside such retained
earnings as working capital as it had considerable liquid funds. Those
corporations exempted from the accumulated earnings tax are found under
Sec. 25 of the NIRC, and that the petitioner is not among those exempted.
The CA affirmed the CTAs decision.
Issue: Whether or not the accumulation of income was justified.
Held:
In order to determine whether profits are accumulated for the reasonable
needs of the business to avoid the surtax upon the shareholders, it must be
shown that the controlling intention of the taxpayer is manifested at the time
of the accumulation, not intentions subsequently, which are mere
afterthoughts. The accumulated profits must be used within reasonable
time after the close of the taxable year. In the instant case, petitioner did
not establish by clear and convincing evidence that such accumulated was
for the immediate needs of the business.
To determine the reasonable needs of the business, the United States
Courts have invented the Immediacy Test which construed the words
reasonable needs of the business to mean the immediate needs of the
business, and it is held that if the corporation did not prove an immediate
need for the accumulation of earnings and profits such was not for
reasonable needs of the business and the penalty tax would apply. (Law of
Federal Income Taxation Vol 7) The working capital needs of a business
depend on the nature of the business, its credit policies, the amount of
inventories, the rate of turnover, the amount of accounts receivable, the
collection rate, the availability of credit and other similar factors. The Tax
Court opted to determine the working capital sufficiency by using the ration
note in favor of the appliance dealer, and the same promissory note is
assigned by the appliance dealer to Philacor. Thus, under this
arrangement, Philacor did not make, sign, issue, accept or transfer the
promissory notes. It is the buyer of the appliances who made, signed and
issued the documents subject to tax while it is the appliance dealer who
transferred these documents to Philacor which likewise indisputably
received or accepted them. Acceptance, however, is an act that is not
even applicable to promissory notes, but only to bills of exchange. Under
the Negotiable Instruments Law, the act of acceptance refers solely to bills
of exchange. In a ruling adopted by the Bureau of Internal Revenue as
early as 1995, acceptance has been defined as having reference to
incoming foreign bills of exchange which are accepted in the Philippines by
the drawees thereof, and not as referring to the common usage of the word
as in receiving. Thus, a party to a taxable transaction who accepts any
documents or instruments in the plain and ordinary meaning does not
become primarily liable for the tax.
RCBC V. CIR
FACTS:
RCBC received the final assessment notice on July 5, 2001. It filed a
protest on July 20, 2001. As the protest was not acted upon, it filed a
Petition for Review with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) on April 30, 2002,
or more than 30 days after the lapse of the 180-day period reckoned from
the submission of complete documents. The CTA dismissed the Petition for
lack of jurisdiction since the appeal was filed out of time.
ISSUE:
Has the action to protest the assessment judicially prescribed?
HELD:
YES. The assessment has become final. The jurisdiction of the CTA has
been expanded to include not only decision but also inactions and both are
jurisdictional such that failure to observe either is fatal.
However, if there has been inaction, the taxpayer can choose between (1)
file a Petition with the CTA within 30 days from the lapse of the 180-day
period OR (2) await the final decision of the CIR and appeal such decision
to the CTA within 30 days after receipt of the decision. These options are
mutually exclusive and resort to one bars the application of the other. Thus,
of
Internal
National Internal Revenue Code; excise tax; proper party to seek a tax
refund. Silkair (Singapore) is a foreign corporation licensed to do business
in the Philippines as an on-line international carrier. It purchased aviation
fuel from Petron and paid the excise taxes. It filed an administrative claim
for refund for excise taxes on the purchase of jet fuel from Petron, which it
alleged to have been erroneously paid. For indirect taxes, 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. Thus, Petron, not Silkair, is the
statutory taxpayer which is entitled to claim a refund. 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.
Southern Cross Cement Corp. v. Cement Manufacturers Association
of the Phils., G.R. No. 158540, Aug. 3, 2005
(HOLY
CRAP,
CHECK
OUT
THE
INTRO!!!!
^.^)
Cement is hardly an exciting subject for litigation. Still, the parties in this
case have done their best to put up a spirited advocacy of their respective
positions, throwing in everything including the proverbial kitchen sink. At
present, the burden of passion, if not proof, has shifted to public
respondents Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and private
respondent Philippine Cement Manufacturers Corporation (Philcemcor),[1]
who now seek reconsideration of our Decision dated 8 July 2004
(Decision), which granted the petition of petitioner Southern Cross Cement
Corporation (Southern Cross).
This case, of course, is ultimately not just about cement. For respondents,
it is about love of country and the future of the domestic industry in the face
of foreign competition. For this Court, it is about elementary statutory
construction, constitutional limitations on the executive power to impose
tariffs and similar measures, and obedience to the law. Just as much was
asserted in the Decision, and the same holds true with this present
Resolution.
POWER OF PRESIDENT TO IMPOSE TARIFF RATES: Without Section
28(2), Article VI, the executive branch has no authority to impose tariffs and
other similar tax levies involving the importation of foreign goods. Assuming
that Section 28(2) Article VI did not exist, the enactment of the SMA by
Congress would be voided on the ground that it would constitute an undue
delegation of the legislative power to tax. The constitutional provision
shields such delegation from constitutional infirmity, and should be
recognized as an exceptional grant of legislative power to the President,
rather than the affirmation of an inherent executive power.
QUALIFIERS: This being the case, the qualifiers mandated by the
Constitution on this presidential authority attain primordial consideration: (1)
there must be a law; (2) there must be specified limits; and (3) Congress
may impose limitations and restrictions on this presidential authority.
POWER EXERCISED BY ALTER EGOS OF PRES: The Court recognizes
that the authority delegated to the President under Section 28(2), Article VI
may be exercised, in accordance with legislative sanction, by the alter egos
of the President, such as department secretaries. Indeed, for purposes of
the Presidents exercise of power to impose tariffs under Article VI, Section
28(2), it is generally the Secretary of Finance who acts as alter ego of the
President. The SMA provides an exceptional instance wherein it is the DTI
or Agriculture Secretary who is tasked by Congress, in their capacities as
alter egos of the President, to impose such measures. Certainly, the DTI
Secretary has no inherent power, even as alter ego of the President, to levy
tariffs and imports.
TARIFF COMMISSION AND DTI SEC ARE AGENTS: Concurrently, the
tasking of the Tariff Commission under the SMA should be likewise
construed within the same context as part and parcel of the legislative
delegation of its inherent power to impose tariffs and imposts to the
executive branch, subject to limitations and restrictions. In that regard, both
the Tariff Commission and the DTI Secretary may be regarded as agents of
Congress within their limited respective spheres, as ordained in the SMA,
in the implementation of the said law which significantly draws its strength
from the plenary legislative power of taxation. Indeed, even the President
may be considered as an agent of Congress for the purpose of imposing
safeguard measures. It is Congress, not the President, which possesses
inherent powers to impose tariffs and imposts. Without legislative
authorization through statute, the President has no power, authority or right
to impose such safeguard measures because taxation is inherently
legislative, not executive.
When Congress tasks the President or his/her alter egos to impose
safeguard measures under the delineated conditions, the President or the
alter egos may be properly deemed as agents of Congress to perform an
act that inherently belongs as a matter of right to the legislature. It is basic
agency law that the agent may not act beyond the specifically delegated
powers or disregard the restrictions imposed by the principal. In short,
Congress may establish the procedural framework under which such
safeguard measures may be imposed, and assign the various offices in the
government bureaucracy respective tasks pursuant to the imposition of
such measures, the task assignment including the factual determination of
whether the necessary conditions exists to warrant such impositions. Under
the SMA, Congress assigned the DTI Secretary and the Tariff Commission
their respective functions in the legislatures scheme of things.
There is only one viable ground for challenging the legality of the limitations
and restrictions imposed by Congress under Section 28(2) Article VI, and
that is such limitations and restrictions are themselves violative of the
Constitution. Thus, no matter how distasteful or noxious these limitations
and restrictions may seem, the Court has no choice but to uphold their
validity unless their constitutional infirmity can be demonstrated.
What are these limitations and restrictions that are material to the present
case? The entire SMA provides for a limited framework under which the
President, through the DTI and Agriculture Secretaries, may impose
safeguard measures in the form of tariffs and similar imposts.
POWER BELONGS TO CONGRESS: the cited passage from Fr. Bernas
actually states, Since the Constitution has given the President the power
of control, with all its awesome implications, it is the Constitution alone
which can curtail such power. Does the President have such tariff powers
under the Constitution in the first place which may be curtailed by the
executive power of control? At the risk of redundancy, we quote Section
28(2), Article VI: The Congress may, by law, authorize the President to fix
within specified limits, and subject to such limitations and restrictions as it
may impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas, tonnage and wharfage
dues, and other duties or imposts within the framework of the national
development program of the Government. Clearly the power to impose
tariffs belongs to Congress and not to the President.
South African Airways vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R.
No. 180356, February 16, 2010.
Gross Philippine billings; off line carrier. South African Airways, an off-line
international carrier selling passage documents through an independent
sales agent in the Philippines, is engaged in trade or business in the
Philippines subject to the 32% income tax imposed by Section 28 (A)(1) of
the 1997 NIRC.
The general rule is that resident foreign corporations shall be liable for a
32% income tax on their income from within the Philippines, except for
resident foreign corporations that are international carriers that derive
income from carriage of persons, excess baggage, cargo and mail
originating from the Philippines which shall be taxed at 2 1/2% of their
Gross Philippine Billings. Petitioner, being an international carrier with no
flights originating from the Philippines, does not fall under the exception. As
such, petitioner must fall under the general rule. This principle is embodied
in the Latin maxim, exception firmatregulam in casibus non exceptis, which
means, a thing not being excepted must be regarded as coming within the
purview of the general rule.
To reiterate, the correct interpretation of the above provisions is that, if an
international air carrier maintains flights to and from the Philippines, it shall
be taxed at the rate of 2 1/2% of its Gross Philippine Billings, while
international air carriers that do not have flights to and from the Philippines
but nonetheless earn income from other activities in the country will be
taxed at the rate of 32% of such income.